Method of treatment for immunogenic treatment resistant cancer

ABSTRACT

The present invention relates to the fields of genetics, immunology and medicine. The present invention more specifically relates to in vitro or ex vivo methods for determining the susceptibility to a cancer treatment of a subject having a tumor. These methods comprise a step of determining the ability of the treatment, of the subject and/or of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, the inability of at least one of the treatment, the subject and the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the therapeutic treatment of cancer. Inventors in particular identify genes specific of a human subject or of cancerous cells which can be used to predict or assess the sensitivity of a subject to a treatment of cancer. The invention also relates to particular compounds capable of activating or enhancing the immune system of a particular subject, when the subject is exposed to a therapeutic treatment of cancer or before such an exposition. It further relates to uses of such compounds, in particular to prepare a pharmaceutical composition to allow or improve the efficiency of a therapy of cancer in a subject in need thereof. The present invention in addition provides kits, methods for selecting a compound of interest, as well as pharmaceutical compositions and uses thereof.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 13/642,221, filed Oct. 19, 2012 which is the U.S. national stage application of International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2011/055134, filed Apr. 1, 2011, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, including all figures, tables and amino acid or nucleic acid sequences.

The Sequence Listing for this application is labeled “Seq-List.txt” which was created on Feb. 21, 2013 and is 1.92 MB. The entire contents of the sequence listing is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

The present disclosure generally relates to the fields of genetics, immunology and medicine. The present invention more specifically relates to in vitro or ex vivo methods for determining the susceptibility to a cancer treatment of a subject having a tumour. These methods comprise a step of determining the ability of the treatment, of the subject and/or of the tumour to induce an anticancer immune response, the inability of at least one of the treatment, the subject and the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the therapeutic treatment of cancer.

Inventors in particular identify molecules (genes as well as proteins) specific of a human subject or of cancerous cells which can be used to predict or assess the sensitivity of a subject to a treatment of cancer.

The invention also relates to particular compounds capable of activating or enhancing the immune system of a particular subject, when the subject is exposed to a therapeutic treatment of cancer or before such an exposition. It further relates to uses of such compounds, in particular to prepare a pharmaceutical composition to allow or improve the efficiency of a therapy of cancer in a subject in need thereof.

The present invention in addition provides kits, methods for selecting a compound of interest, as well as pharmaceutical compositions and uses thereof.

BACKGROUND ART

Cancer is the major cause of mortality in most industrialized countries.

Although several anti-cancer therapies are proposed, amongst which feature chemotherapy [anthracyclines such as daunorubicine, doxorubicin (DX), idarubicin and mitoxantrone (MTX), as well as oxali-platinum (oxaliplatin or OXP), cis-platinum (cisplatin or CDDP), and taxanes (paclitaxel or docetaxel), cyclophosphamide/alkylating compounds are considered as the most efficient cytotoxic agents of the oncologist armamentarium] and radiotherapy [XR], the benefits of said treatments still tends to be insufficient.

Cytotoxic agents are supposed to directly destroy cancer cells by stimulating diverse cell death pathways. Nonetheless, several lines of evidence point to a critical contribution of the host immune system to the therapeutic activity mediated by tumoricidal agents (Zitvogel et al., 2008). Indeed, in some instances, the cell death modality triggered by chemotherapy or radiotherapy allows recognition of dying tumor cells by antigen presenting cells, thus eliciting a tumor-specific cognate immune response which is critical for tumor elimination.

However, most of standard chemotherapies induce a non-immunogenic apoptosis (Zitvogel et al., 2004; Steinman et al., 2004; Lake et al., 2006). Thus, even after an initially efficient chemotherapy, patients who do not develop an efficient antitumourous immune response are confronted to chemotherapy-resistant tumourous variants.

Inventors have shown for the first time that OXP and anthracyclines induce immunogenic cell death while other chemotherapeutic agents such as CDDP and alkylating agents such as mitomycin C tend to induce non-immunogenic cell death (Casares et al., 2005; Obeid et al., 2007). They have further observed that some patients were also resistant to treatments identified as inducing an immunogenic cell death.

Solutions to detect dysfunctions responsible for an absent or reduced response to existing treatments as well as compounds usable to overcome said dysfunctions therefore appear critical for the patient and are herein advantageously provided by inventors.

SUMMARY

The present invention is based on the observation by inventors that the cell death immunogenicity depends on the lethal stimulus, on the presence of specific signals produced by or exposed on tumor cells, as well as on the ability of the subject having the tumor, and in particular of the subject's immune system, to recognize said signals.

The present invention provides an in vitro or ex vivo method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a treatment of cancer (in other words of determining susceptibility of a patient having a tumor to respond to a treatment of cancer), which method comprises a step of detecting the presence of an anticancer immune response of the subject undergoing the treatment of cancer, the absence of an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

The method may be applied before and/or after exposition of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

In a particular embodiment, the therapeutic treatment of cancer is a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from a chemotherapy using a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane and an antimitotic agent, preferably from an anthracyclin, a platin, and an antimitotic agent; and radiotherapy.

The presence of cells selected from IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, dendritic cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, in the tumor of the subject may in particular be indicative of an anticancer immune response and of a sensitivity of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

As well, the appearance of anti-CRT antibodies in a sample, typically a serum sample, of a subject after a first exposition of the subject to a treatment of cancer, and preferably an increase of said anti-CRT antibodies during said treatment, may be indicative of an anticancer immune response and of a sensitivity of the subject to said treatment of cancer.

In vitro or ex vivo methods of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a treatment of cancer are further herein described. These methods comprise a step of determining the ability of the treatment, of the tumor and/or of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response, the inability of at least one of the treatment, the subject and the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

The presence, in the subject, of an alteration leading to the abnormal expression of an immune gene, as herein described, may in particular determine the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response. The alteration may be a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP).

The step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may in particular consist in verifying the expression by tumor cells of an immunogenic cell death marker selected from a protein allowing or enhancing CRT exposure at the surface of tumor cells, and a protein expressed during the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response and/or during the macroautophagic response of the subject's immune system.

A method of selecting an optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer in a subject having a tumor is in addition herein described. This method comprises a step as previously described of assessing the sensitivity of the subject to a first treatment of cancer (herein also identified as “conventional treatment”) and, if the subject is resistant to said first treatment of cancer, a step of selecting a “compensatory molecule”, to be used, alone or in combination with the first treatment of cancer as the optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer for the subject.

A particular method of selecting an optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer in a subject having a tumor is a method comprising a step of assessing the sensitivity of the subject to a first treatment of cancer with a method as herein described, and, if the subject is resistant to said first treatment of cancer, and a step of selecting (i) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of ATP, HMGB1, LysRS and/or IL-8, and/or the exposure of CRT, ERp57, LysRS and/or KDEL receptor at the surface of a tumour cell, (ii) a product stimulating the autophagy machinery and/or an ER stress response, (iii) a product recruiting and/or activating IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells and/or dendritic cells, (iv) a product promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway, or able to bypass said pathway, (v) a product triggering the P2RX7 (P2X purinoceptor 7) and/or the NALP3 inflammasome, (vi) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of IL-1b, (vii) a product capable of stimulating intratumoral Vd2 T lymphocytes, and (viii) a product selected from an anti-allergic drug, a neurotropic drug, an antihypertensive or cardiotropic drug such as a cardiac glycoside, a spindle poison drug, an antimicrobial drug, an anti-osteoclastic drug, a diuretic drug, an oestrogen, an apyrase inhibitor (or ecto-ATPase inhibitor), and (ix) any combination thereof, to be used in combination with the first treatment of cancer as the optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer for the subject.

Also herein described are compensatory molecules for use in the treatment of cancer, preferably in combination with a conventional treatment of cancer, in particular a chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer, in a subject identified, by a method as previously described, as resistant to a conventional treatment of cancer.

The present invention further encompasses the use of such a compensatory molecule to prepare a pharmaceutical composition for treating a cancer in a subject identified, by a method as previously described, as resistant to a conventional treatment of cancer, as well as the corresponding pharmaceutical composition. Preferably, the pharmaceutical composition further comprises, as a combined preparation, a drug used in a conventional treatment of cancer, for simultaneous, separate or sequential use in the treatment of said cancer.

The present invention in particular encompasses a drug selected from (i) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of ATP, HMGB1, LysRS and/or IL-8, and/or the exposure of CRT, ERp57, LysRS and/or KDEL receptor at the surface of a tumour cell, (ii) a product stimulating the autophagy machinery and/or an ER stress response, (iii) a product recruiting and/or activating IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells and/or dendritic cells, (iv) a product promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway, or able to bypass said pathway, (v) a product triggering the P2RX7 (P2X purinoceptor 7) and/or the NALP3 inflammasome, (vi) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of IL-1b, (vii) a product capable of stimulating intratumoral Vd2 T lymphocytes, and (viii) a product selected from an anti-allergic drug, a neurotropic drug, an antihypertensive or cardiotropic drug such as a cardiac glycoside, a spindle poison drug, an antimicrobial drug, an anti-osteoclastic drug, a diuretic drug, an oestrogen, an apyrase inhibitor (or ecto-ATPase inhibitor) and (ix) any combination thereof, for use in a treatment of cancer, preferably in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from a chemotherapy using a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane and an antimitotic agent, preferably from an anthracyclin, an oxaliplatin, a taxane and an antimitotic agent; and radiotherapy, in a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer according to a method as herein described of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a therapeutic treatment of cancer.

Induction of immunogenic cancer-cell death, using a compensatory molecule as herein described, allows the subject's immune system, thanks to the present invention, to contribute, through a “bystander effect”, to the eradication of cancer cells and cancer stem cells which are resistant to conventional therapeutic treatments.

Herein described is also a method of treating cancer comprising the administration to a subject in need thereof, as previously explained, of a compensatory molecule, preferably together with a drug used in a conventional treatment of cancer (as a combined preparation).

Further herein described are the following kits:

-   -   A kit to detect the abnormal expression, in particular in a         tumor biopsy, of a gene selected from CCR1, EIF2AK2, DNAJC10,         PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC, BAX and combinations         thereof, in a tumor sample of the subject, the kit         comprising (i) at least one pair of primers and (ii) at least         one fluorescent probe, for example two different probes,         allowing the quantitative detection of the expression of a gene         selected from CCR1, EIF2AK2, DNAJC10, PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB,         IKBKB, PPP1CC, BAX, and (iii) a leaflet providing the control         quantitative expression values corresponding to at least one of         said genes in a control population.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a gene selected from AHR and MTHFR         (for example a kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism         associated with an abnormal expression of such a gene), in a         tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at         least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two differently         labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the wild-type         allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated allele of a         gene selected from AHR and MTHFR.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a gene selected from FAT2 and MTHFR         (for example a kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism         associated with an abnormal expression of such a gene), in a         tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at         least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two differently         labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the wild-type         allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated allele of a         gene selected from FAT2 and MTHFR.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a gene selected from DDX58 (RIG-1) and         CX3CR1 (for example a kit to detect the presence of a         polymorphism associated with an abnormal expression of such a         gene), in a tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit         comprising (i) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least         two differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the         wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated         allele of a gene selected from DDX58 and CX3CR1.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a NLRP4 gene (for example a kit to         detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with an         abnormal expression of such a gene), in a tumor or blood sample         of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at least one pair of         primers, and (ii) at least two differently labelled probes, the         first probe recognizing the wild-type allele and the second         probe recognizing the mutated allele of the NLRP4 gene.     -   A kit comprising:         -   a. (i) at least one pair of primers, (ii) at least one             fluorescent probe allowing the quantitative detection of the             expression of a gene selected from CCR1, EIF2AK2, DNAJC10,             PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC and BAX and (iii) a             leaflet providing the control quantitative expression values             corresponding to at least one of said genes in a control             population; and         -   b. (i) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two             differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the             wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the             mutated allele of a gene selected from NLRP4, FAT2 and MTHFR             (for neoadjuvant therapy) or TLR4, P2RX7, DDX58 (for             adjuvant therapy).     -   A kit comprising:         -   a. several antibodies for immunohistochemistry usage             recognizing the core protein machinery of ER stress and             autophagy in tissue sections (paraffin embedded- or frozen)             such as phosphorylated eif2a, ERp57, calreticulin, HMGB1,             LC3 gate 16 GABARAP (gamma-aminobutyric acid             receptor-associated protein); and         -   b. (i) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two             differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the             wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the             mutated allele of a gene selected from NLRP4, FAT2 and MTHFR             (for neoadjuvant therapy) or TLR4, P2RX7, DDX58 (for             adjuvant therapy).

Early breast tumors present with natural defects in HMGB1 nuclear expression (about 70% are defective). Similarly, mouse tumor cell lines expressing high nuclear HMGB1 lose their nuclear expression as the tumor grows and develops in vivo. Inventors herein demonstrate that nuclear HMGB1 is critical for the immunogenicity of cell death, since HMGB1 released during the cytotoxic hit by chemotherapy (anthracyclines, oxaliplatine, cyclophosphamide, irradiation) binds to TLR4/myd88 and results in T cell priming and T cell-dependent tumor regression.

Moreover, cancers also have to undergo autophagy prior to cell death, a survival program endowed with intrinsic immunogenicity in that it enables ATP release and recruitment of dendritic cells and T cells into tumor beds post-chemotherapy. Tumors deficient in one or several components of the autophagy machinery (ATG5, ATG6, ATG7, ATG12, etc.) failed to induce prolonged antitumor effects post-chemotherapy. Inventors further herein demonstrate that inhibition of ecto-ATPases (such as anti-CD39 or anti-CD73 antibodies (Ab)) restore chemoresponsiveness of autophagy deficient (chemoresistant) tumors. In human early breast cancer (BC) in particular, autophagy deficiency can be diagnosed using anti-LC3-II specific Ab. About 80% of such malignancies present with less than 10% LC3-II+ tumor cells, meaning that these BC are “autophagy deficient”. Inventors herein show in particular that patients harbouring an early BC which is autophagy competent (>10% LC3-II+ tumor cells in the primary tumor) have a longer disease free survival than patients harbouring autophagy deficient tumors (<10% LC3-II+ tumor cells in the primary tumor) when treated in particular with anthracyclines-based adjuvant therapy.

Interestingly, when both nuclear HMGB1 and cytosolic LC3-II+ are negative or absent (<10% for LC3), early BC patients are doomed to relapse despite adjuvant anthracycline-based therapy, prompting the use of combined compensatory therapies (such as a TLR4/myd8 agonist, anti-CD39 Ab, and/or anti-CD73 Ab). Such a compensatory therapy is preferably administered between one and 3 days post-systemic chemotherapy (after each single cycle to 6-8 cycles), preferably intratumorally, in the tumor bed, or systemically.

The present invention thus encompasses an in vitro method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a treatment of cancer, which method comprises a step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, said step comprising verifying the expression by tumor cells of nuclear HMGB1, wherein the absence of nuclear HMGB1 in tumor cells is indicative of the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response and wherein the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response is indicative of a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer, and wherein, on the contrary, the presence of nuclear HMGB1 in tumor cells is indicative of the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response and wherein the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response is indicative of the subject's sensitivity to the treatment of cancer.

The treatment of cancer is typically a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from a chemotherapy using a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, an oxaliplatin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; or radiotherapy, and can be in particular crizotinib or dasatinib.

The subject is typically a subject who has been treated for cancer or who is undergoing the therapeutic treatment of cancer. Cancer is typically breast cancer, in particular advanced or metastatic breast cancer; colon cancer; sarcoma; leukemia; ovarian cancer; testicular cancer; brain cancer; head and neck cancer, stomach cancer; or pancreatic cancer.

In the previously described method, the step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may further comprise verifying the expression by tumor cells of cytosolic microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3), in particular of LC3-II, wherein the absence of cytosolic LC3 in tumor cells is indicative of the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, and wherein, on the contrary, the presence of cytosolic LC3 in tumor cells is indicative of the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response.

The step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may also further comprises verifying the expression by tumor cells of ecto-nucleoside-triphosphate-diphosphohydrolase (CD39) and/or of the ectonucleotidase CD73, the presence of CD39 and/or CD73 being indicative of the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response.

The verification is typically performed on a sample of tumor cells, and the detection of cytosolic LC3 in 10%, preferably in less than 10%, of the tumor cells of said sample, reveals the absence of LC3 and thus the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response. As well, the presence of CD39 or CD73 in at least 10%, preferably in more than 10%, of the tumor cells reveals an abnormal overexpression of CD39 or CD73 in said tumor cells and thus the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, following for example the administration of crisotinib or dasatinib.

Also herein described is a method of selecting an optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer in a subject having a tumor, which method comprises a step of assessing the sensitivity of the subject to a first treatment of cancer and, if the subject is resistant to said first treatment of cancer, a step of selecting (i) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of HMGB1 and/or promoting ATP release (ii) a product promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway (such as dendrophilin, in particular dendrophilin S or dendrophilin A), or able to bypass said pathway, (iii) a product stimulating the autophagy machinery (such as an ecto-ATPase (apyrase) inhibitor selected from an anti-CD39 antibody and an anti-CD73 antibody), and (iv) any combination thereof, to be used in combination with the first treatment of cancer as the optimal therapeutic treatment of cancer for the subject.

A further object herein described is a drug selected from dendrophilin, an anti-CD39 antibody, an anti-CD73 antibody, and any combination thereof, for use in a treatment of cancer in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from a chemotherapy using a drug selected from using a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent, for example using crisotinib, dasatinib; and radiotherapy, in a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer according to a method as herein described.

Further described are:

-   -   a therapeutic kit comprising i) at least one drug selected from         dendrophilin, ii) an anti-CD39 antibody, and an anti-CD73         antibody; and iii) a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a         platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent, and     -   a diagnostic kit comprising i) at least one anti-HMGB1         antibody, ii) at least one anti-LC3-II antibody, and         optionally iii) at least one antibody detecting an ecto-ATPase,         preferably selected from an anti-CD39 antibody and an anti-CD73         antibody.

Another object relates to a method for treating a subject having a tumor, said subject being resistant to chemotherapy using a drug selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, an oxaliplatin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; or radiotherapy, wherein said method comprises exposing said subject to said chemotherapy, for example using crisotinib, dasatinib; or radiotherapy and, simultaneously or subsequently, administering intratumorously, in the tumor bed or systemically dendrophilin, an anti-CD39 antibody, and/or an anti-CD73 antibody to said subject.

FIGURES

The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication, with color drawing(s), will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.

FIGS. 1A-E. Th1 and Th17 related genes expression in tumors post-chemotherapy.

(A) MCA205 tumors were treated with Doxorubicin (DX) or PBS. Tumor growth was monitored before and 8 days post-chemotherapy.

(B) Gene expression in DX versus PBS group was tested by RT-PCR (Taqman) and shown as fold change 8 days after treatment (lower panel). A more than 2 fold change was used as threshold for significant differences.

(C) Measurements of protein levels of IFN-γ and IL-17 in tumor homogeneates by ELISA at different time points.

(D) AHR antagonist CH223191 was dissolved with DMSO and diluted in Olive Oil. Mice treated with either PBS or DX received a daily i.p. injection of CH223191 (2 mM, 100 ml) for 4 days starting from the day of DX (or PBS) treatment.

(E) Expression of IFN-γ and IL-17 in dissociated tumor beds was tested by intracellular staining gated on live, CD45.2⁺ and CD3⁺ cells at day 8 post-treatment. Each group contained at least 5 mice and each experiment was performed at least twice yielding identical results. Each graph depicts means±SEM of tumor sizes (A, D) or protein expression (C) or percentages of positive cells (E). *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 2A-F. CD8⁺ T cells and γδ T cells are the major sources of IFN-γ and IL-17 respectively post-chemotherapy.

(A) Single cell suspensions of MCA205 tumors (day 8 post-DX) were analyzed by flow cytometry. IFN-γ and IL-17 positive cells were gated within live CD45.2⁺ and CD3⁺ cells (TILs). Within this gate, the proportions of CD3⁺ CD8⁺ cells and CD3⁺ TCR δ⁺ cells were examined A typical dot plot analysis is shown.

(B) A typical dot plot in one DX or PBS treated tumor showing IFN-γ production by CD8 and IL-17 production by γδ T is depicted (upper panel). The percentages of IFN-γ⁺ and IL-17⁺ T cells among CD4⁺, CD8⁺ and TCR6⁺ TILs in PBS versus DX-treated tumors are indicated as means±SEM of 5 tumors per condition (lower panel).

(C) Absolute numbers of IFN-γ⁺ CD8⁺T cells and IL-17⁺ γδ T cells per 1 mm³ of tumor are indicated as means±SEM in 5 tumors treated with DX or PBS.

(D) Kinetic study of IL-17 and IFN-γ production by γδ T and CD8⁺T cells respectively analyzed by flow cytometry in tumors treated with PBS or DX.

(E) Ki67 expression on γδ TILs 8 days after DX showed as means±SEM in 5 tumors treated with DX or PBS.

(F) Correlation between the percentages of γδ T17 and Tc1 TILs in all tumors (treated or not) was plotted for MCA205 sarcomas (each dot representing one tumor). *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 3A-D. Recruitment of both Tc1 and γδ T17 cells correlate with better outcome in radiotherapy of TS/A tumors.

(A) Established TS/A tumors were treated with local irradiation on day 7. Mice were segregated into responders and non responders according to their tumor regression (TR) or tumor progression (TP) after radiotherapy (n=5).

(B) Percentages of CD8⁺T cells and Tc1 among CD3⁺ TILs are indicated as means±SEM.

(C) Percentages of γδ T and γδ T17 cells among CD3⁺ TILs are indicated as means±SEM.

(D) Correlation between the percentages of γδ T17 and Tc1 TILs in all tumors (treated or not) was plotted for TS/A mammary cancers (each dot representing one tumor). *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 4A-D. IL-17 contributes to prophylactic and therapeutic responses to immunogenic chemotherapy.

(A) Role of IFN-γ and IL-17 in DX-mediated anti-tumor effects. Mice bearing established MCA205 sarcoma were treated with local DX and systemic neutralizing antibodies (against mouse IFN-γ (left panel) or IL-17 (right panel) or isotype control (Iso ctrl) i.p. every 2 days (3 injections total) starting from the day of DX. Tumor sizes are plotted as means±SEM for 5 mice/group. The experiment was performed twice with identical results.

(B-C) Role of IL-17/IL-17Rα signaling pathway in the immunogenicity of cell death. Oxaliplatin (OX)-treated EG-7 cells were inoculated in the footpad of WT versus IL-17Rα^(−/−) mice (n=5) (B) or into WT mice along with anti-IL-17 neutralizing Ab (or isotype Ctrl Ab) (C) and OVA-specific IFN-γ secretion was measured in the draining lymph nodes.

(D) Immunization with DX-treated MCA205 and rechallenge with a tumorigenic dose of live MCA205 were performed at day 0 and day 7 respectively in mouse with various genetic backgrounds (as indicated). The percentages of tumor free mice were scored at different time points. A representative experiment out of two is depicted including 6-10 mice/group. *p<0.05, **p<0.01.

FIGS. 5A-D. The therapeutic activity of anthracyclines depended upon Vγ4/6 γδ T cells.

Established MCA205 were treated locally with DX in various genetic backgrounds (A, C) or in WT mice in addition to systemic administration of neutralizing antibodies anti-CCL20 (or isotype Ctrl Ab) (B).

(D) A kinetic measurement of tumor sizes is plotted as means±SEM. A representative experiment out of two yielding identical results is shown. *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 6A-E. A DC/γδT cell cross-talk leading to IL-1β-dependent IL-17 production.

(A-B) Cocultures of naïve LNs derived γδ T (A-B) or TCR δ⁻T (A) cells in the presence of recombinant mouse cytokines (1 μg/ml IL-1β or/and IL-23, 5 μg/ml TGF-β, 10 μg/ml IL-6) (A) with or without TCR cross-linking with anti-CD3ε mAb pre-coated plates (5 μg/ml, Clone 145-2C11) (B).

(C) Triple or double mixed coculture of LNs derived γδ T cells and/or bone marrow-derived DC loaded or not with live or DX-treated MCA205 was monitored for IL-1β and IL-17A release with ELISA test at 48 hrs.

(D) DX-treated MCA205 loaded DC/γδ T cell cross-talk was also performed in the presence of 20 μg/ml IL-1RA (Amgen) or anti-IL-23 or IL-23R neutralizing antibodies or 10 μg/ml IL-18BP or 20 μM CH-223191. IL-1β and IL-17A release was measured at 48 hrs in ELISA.

(E) Naïve lymph node cells from C57bl/6 mice were seeded in 96 well plates, stimulated with cytokines indicated with or without anti-CD3 crosslinking in the presence of GolgiStop (BD Bioscience). IL-17 production and CD69 expression with or without CH-223191 are depicted. Graphs depict means±SEM of triplicate wells of cytokine release assessed at 48 hrs in ELISA. A representative experiment out of 3-6 is depicted in each case.*p<0.05.

FIGS. 7A-B. Adoptive transfer of γδ T cells synergize with chemotherapy under condition that γδ T cells express IL-1R1.

(A) Tumor growth after an adoptive transfer of LN derived γδ T or TCRδ⁻ T cells into tumor beds two days after local DX treatment in established MCA205 sarcoma.

(B) The synergistic effects between γδT cells and DX were analyzed comparing WT versus IL-1R1^(−/−) γδ T cells. Tumor sizes are plotted as means±SEM for 5 mice/group. A representative experiment out of two yielding identical results is shown. *p<0.05.

FIGS. 8A-B. DX polarizes TILs towards a TH1 and TH17 pattern.

(A) The precise calculation of fold changes for individual cytokine or chemokine, which was significantly increased at day 8 post-DX, is depicted for Th1- and Th17-like profiles as tested by low density array.

(B) The impact of AHR pharmacological inhibitor CH-223191 on pro-apoptotic effect of DX or MTX against MCA205 was measured. A reduction in mitochondrial membrane potential indicated by decreased DiOC6(3) fluorescence was used to show cell apoptosis. The experiment was performed twice with identical results.

FIGS. 9A-E. Infiltration of CT26 tumors with Tc1 and γδ T17 cells after therapy with anthracyclines.

(A) Tumor growth kinetics after treatment of established CT26 colon cancers with PBS or DX. The graph depicts means±SEM of size in 5 tumors per condition.

(B) Single cell suspensions of CT26 tumors were analyzed by flow cytometry at day 8 post-DX. After gated on live cells, IL-17 production was checked in CD45.2⁺, CD3⁺, CD4⁺, TCR δ⁺ cells compared with their corresponding negative fractions. A typical dot plot is shown.

(C-D) The percentage of CD8 T cells among TILs and their IFN-γ production (C) and the percentage of γδ T cells among TILs and their IL-17 production (D) were examined in PBS versus DX-treated tumors by flow cytometry. Means±SEM of percentages in 5 tumors/group are indicated.

(E) Correlation between the percentages of γδ T17 and Tc1 TILs in all CT26 tumors (treated or not) was plotted (each dot representing one tumor). *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIG. 10. Phenotype of tumor infiltrated γδ T cells after DX therapy.

Flow cytometry analyses of the γδ T17 cells in the gate of live CD45.2⁺, CD3⁺ T cells invading MCA205 tumors at day 8 post-DX after a staining using the antibodies indicated in the Y axis. A typical dot plot analysis is depicted. The experiment has been performed three times yielding identical results.

FIG. 11. CCR6 does not contribute to the recruitment of γδ T17 in tumors.

Flow cytometry analyses of the γδ T17 cells in the gate of live, CD45.2⁺, CD3⁺ T cells invading MCA205 tumors at day 8 post-DX in WT (upper panel) versus CCR6 loss-of-function mice (lower panel).

A typical dot plot analysis is depicted with means±SEM for 5 mice.

FIGS. 12A-B. IL-6 and TGF-β failed to play a role in the immunogenicity or therapeutic effects of anthracyclines.

(A) Established CT26 colon cancer was treated with doxorubicin (DX) in the presence of systemic administration of neutralizing anti-IL-6 Antibody (or isotype Control Antibody). Kinetic tumor growth with 5 animals/group was shown.

(B). Mice were immunized with DX treated CT26 on the right flank and concomitantly challenged with live CT26 tumor cells on the opposite flank at day 0. In parallel, anti-TGF-β or a control peptide (100 μg/mouse) were administered systemically from day 0 to 10. Kinetic tumor growth with 5 mice/group is shown for one representative experiment. The experiment has been performed twice yielding identical results. *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.

FIG. 13. The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) R554K or Arg554Lys (rs2066853) in AHR gene affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy in a neoadjuvant setting (before surgery) in breast cancer patients treated with anthracyclines (n=239).

The proportion of pathological complete responses was compared in wild-type and mutated groups of patients. The Chi square test was used to test the genetic association between the primary endpoint and the AHR-R554Ks SNP.

FIGS. 14A-E. Oxaliplatin induced CRT exposure.

U2OS cells stably expressing CRT-GFP treated with 1 μM mitoxantrone (MTX) 150 μM cisplatin (CDDP) or 300 μM oxaliplatin (OXP) for the indicated time have been analyzed by means of automated image acquisition and automated analysis. Data is depicted as (A) representative images (B) and normalized CRT-GFP granularity values as well as percent of cells exhibiting nuclear shrinkage. The data is depicted as mean±s.e.m. of quadruplicates from a representative experiment. (C) Immunofluorescene was conducted on CRT-GFP expressing cells by means of staining with anti-CRT antibody and subsequent confocal image acquisition. (D) CRT has been cloned in frame n-terminal to a HaloTag® sequence followed by a KDEL ER retention signal. (E) The impermeable HaloTag® ligand forms covalent bonds exclusively with surface exposed HaloTag®-CRT fusion protein, whereas intracellular HaloTag®-CRT remains undetected.

FIGS. 15A-D. Mitochondrial cell death upon treatment with oxaliplatin and cisplatin.

U2OS cells stably expressing CRT-GFP treated with 1 μM mitoxantrone (MTX) 150 μM cisplatin (CDDP) or 300 μM oxaliplatin (OXP) have been acquired by means of an automated microscope and subsequently subjected to automated analysis. The data is depicted as representative images (A) and (B) normalized Bax-GFP granularity values.

The data represents mean±s.e.m. of quadruplicates from a representative experiment. (C, D) U2OS cells were treated with the indicated drugs at the indicated concentrations. 16 h after treatment, cell death was monitored by simultaneous staining with 3,3 dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC₆(3)) and propidium iodide (PI), and the percentage of dying (DiOC₆(3)^(low) PI⁻, open bars) and dead (DiOC₆(3)^(low) PI⁺, closed bars) cells was determined by cytofluorometry.

The data represents means±s.e.m. of triplicate determinations.

FIGS. 16A-D. Oxaliplatin and cisplatin induced ATP release.

Cells were treated with mitoxantrone (MTX), oxaliplatin (OXP), or cisplatin (CDDP) at the indicated concentrations. 16 h post-treatment, the intracellular ATP was stained with quinacrine and the nuclei were counterstained with Hoechst 33342. The vital dye propidium iodide (PI) was used to visualize dead cells before acquisition by (A) automated fluorescence microscopy or (B) cytofluorometric analysis. In addition, the concentrations of intracellular (C) and extracellular (D) of ATP were monitored.

Results are means±SEM of triplicate determinations.

FIGS. 17A-E. OXP-, but not CDDP-induced ER stress markers.

Cells stably expressing G3BP-GFP or GFP-LC3 were treated for 4 h with 1 mM sodium arsenate heptahydrate (NaHAsO₄) or 10 μM rapamycin for 8 h as positive controls respectively. In addition the cells have been treated with 150 μM cisplatin (CDDP) or 300 μM oxaliplatin (OXP) for the indicated time to assess (A, B) the formation of stress granules and (C, D) the lipidation of LC3 as an indicator for autophagy. Representative images (A, C) and mean granularity values (B, D) of quadruplicates are shown.

(E) The phosphorylation status of eIF2α has been assessed by immunoblotting against the phosphoneoepitope Ser51 of eIF2α by means of a monoclonal antibody. A polyclonal antibody has been used to visualize whole eIF2α protein levels.

FIGS. 18A-D. Thapsigargin restores CRT exposure in the presence of cisplatin.

Compounds from the ICCB known bioactive compounds library have been tested for their capacity to induce CRT-exposure. The library compounds were added at a concentration range from 90 nM to 48 μM in the presence (A) or absence (C) of 50 μM cisplatin (CDDP). The cells were incubated for 4 h and were acquired by means of automated microscopy. The data is depicted as dot plots and representative images (B).

To eliminate background produced by other library compounds the data from the library screen in the presence of cisplatin was plotted against data from a screen in the absence of CDDP. Mean as well as 95% percentile is depicted and the data represents doublets from two independent experiments.

(D) CRT exposure has been measured 4 h upon application of the indicated dose range of thapsigargin (THAPS) with and without 50 μM CDDP. Samples have been acquired in quadruplicates from 3 independent experiments and data is depicted as mean±s.e.m.

FIGS. 19A-F. Thapsigargin restores CRT-exposure of cisplatin treated cells in vitro and anti-cancer immunogenicity in vivo.

(A, B) U2OS or HaloTag®-CRT stably expressing U2OS cells were assessed after a treatment with mitoxantrone (MTX), oxaliplatin (OXP), cisplatin (CDDP), thapsigargin (THAPS) or cisplatin combined with thapsigargin by immunofluorescence staining or incubation with impermeable fluorescent HaloTag® ligand respectively followed by flow cytometric analysis. CRT exposure upon combination of 150 μM CDDP with 1 μM THAPS was confirmed in (C) mouse lewis lung cell carcinoma, (D) CT26 and (E) MCA205 cells by means of immunostaining and following flow cytometric analysis.

(F) MCA205 cells have been used for tumor vaccination in vivo. Treated cells have been inoculated subcutaneously into the flank of C56BL/6 mice. The mice have been rechallenged after 6 days with living cells and the tumor growth is depicted in the survival plot (n=10).

FIGS. 20A-E. THAPS exhibits no additional cytotoxicity.

(A) U2OS cells were treated with the indicated drugs in the presence or absence of thapsigargin (THAPS) at the indicated concentrations. 16 h after treatment, cell death was monitored by simultaneous staining with 3,3 dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC₆(3)) and propidium iodide (PI), and the percentage of dying (DiOC₆(3)^(low) PI⁻, open bars) and dead (DiOC₆(3)^(low) PI⁺, closed bars) cells was determined by cytofluorometry.

The data represents means±s.e.m. of triplicate determinations.

(B, C) U2OS cells were treated with mitoxantrone (MTX), oxaliplatin (OXP), or cisplatin (CDDP) with and without THAPS at the indicated concentrations. 16 h post-treatment, the intracellular ATP was stained with quinacrine and the nuclei were counterstained with the Hoechst 33342. The vital dye propidium iodide (PI) was used to visualize dead cells before acquisition by (B) automated fluorescence microscopy or (C) cytofluorometric analysis.

In addition, the concentrations of intracellular (D) and extracellular (E) of ATP were monitored.

Results are means±SEM of triplicate determinations.

FIG. 21. “CRT screen”

Compounds from the US drug compound library have been tested for their capacity to induce CRT-exposure. The library compounds were tested at a final concentration of 1 μM in CRT-GFP, H2B-RFP stably expressing U2OS cells. The cells were incubated for 4 h and were acquired by means of automated microscopy. The data is depicted as dot plots representing normalized mean values (n=4).

FIG. 22. Study profile

The Support Vector Machine (SVM) analyses were performed with the MEV software version 4.5. The LOOCV approach was used as SVM process to estimate the prediction accuracy of the molecular classifiers. The relevance of these classifiers was then tested with univariate (Fisher's exact test) and multivariate (logistic regression and ROC curves) methods.

FIG. 23. “Calreticulin pathway” molecular classifiers based on 5 to 3 genes are detected in the two anthracycline treated cohorts (FEC) but not in the taxane treated cohort (TET).

The prediction accuracy of each molecular classifier was assessed by Fisher's exact test on the “pCR vs non pCR” contingency tables obtained from the LOOCV approach of SVM procedure. The SVM training parameters used were a polynomial kernal matrix with a diagonal factor of 1.3. The predictive value of the classifier was also evaluated by the sensibility (Se) and specificity (Spe) parameters. The “calreticulin pathway” was represented by an initial set of 43 genes in the cohort HOUSTON FEC and 53 genes in the cohort IGGO FEC/TET.

FIGS. 24A-C. Three genes based-“Calreticulin pathway” molecular classifiers are independent predictive factors in the two anthracyclines treated cohorts (FEC) but not in the taxane treated cohort (TET).

A. Multivariate analyses using logistic regression were performed in each cohort to test the association of the molecular classifier with a pathological complete response (pCR) by taking into account the effects of classical clinical factors. The HOUSTON FEC cohort was matched on oestrogen receptor status. The IGGO FEC and TET cohorts were restricted to patients with oestrogen-receptor-negative tumours.

B. ROC curves were used to test the quality of the predictions.

C. The under-expression (down) or over-expression (up) of genes in the classifiers between pCR and non pCR groups are mentioned with the respective p-values of non parametric Mann-Whitney test. Adj P-value: adjusted P-value; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval; AUC: area under ROC curve.

FIGS. 25A-B. Search of a common “Calreticulin pathway” molecular classifier between the two anthracyclines treated cohorts (FEC).

A. The genes were classified by decreasing value according to the non parametric Mann-Whitney test used to compare the gene expressions between pCR and non-pCR groups. * These genes are represented by median values of replicates.

B. The p-values of genes from anthracyline-treated cohorts (FEC) were plotted. The common molecular classifier was constructed with the candidate genes located in the grey areas.

FIGS. 26A-C. The common 3 genes based—“Calreticulin” molecular classifier is an independent predictive factor in the two anthracyclines treated cohorts (FEC) but not in the taxane treated cohort (TET).

A. The prediction accuracy of the common molecular classifier was assessed by Fisher's exact test on the “pCR vs non pCR” contingency tables obtained from the LOOCV approach of SVM procedure. The SVM training parameters used were a polynomial kernal matrix with a diagonal factor of 2. The predictive value of the classifier was also evaluated by the sensibility (Se), specificity (Spe), positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) and accuracy parameters.

B. Multivariate analyses using logistic regression were performed in each cohort to test the association of the common molecular classifier with pathological complete response (pCR) by taking into account the effects of classical clinical factors.

C. The under-expression (down) or over-expression (up) of genes in the common classifier between pCR and non pCR groups are mentioned. * The gene expression differences were statistically significant between the pCR and non-pCR groups.

FIG. 27. A molecular parameter signature (also herein identified as “algorithm”) that integrates the “CALR pathway” signature and a MTHFR SNP is particularly efficient to predict the ability of a given subject to respond to anthracyclines in the HOUSTON FEC cohort.

Multivariate analyses using logistic regression and ROC curves were performed to assess the prediction accuracy of four different models of classifiers.

FIGS. 28A-H: Cardiac Glycosides emit immunogenic signals.

Compounds from the US Drug library have been tested for their capacity to induce CRT-exposure, HMGB1 release and ATP release.

(A) The library compounds were added at a concentration of 1 μM and U2OS cells were incubated for 4 h, 15 h or 24 h and CRT-GFP, HMGB1-GFP and quinacrine signal was acquired by means of automated microscopy respectively. The data is depicted as rank scored heat map (A).

(B,C) CRT exposure has been measured 4 h upon application of the indicated drugs using laser confocal line scanning microscopy. A minimum of 500 cells have been analysed per sample and data is depicted as mean±s.e.m.

(D) Cardiac glycosides at 1 μM have been analysed for CRT exposure by means of anti-CRT surface staining and FACS quantification.

(E) NAC and GSH pretreated U2OS cells were analyzed for CRT exposure by FACS and inhibition of reactive oxidative species abolished CRT exposure.

(F) U2OS cells treated with the indicated doses of Digoxin and Digitoxin were analyzed for CRT exposure by means of FACS quantified surface staining.

(G) HMGB1 release was measured using HMGB1 ELISA 24 h after treatment in the supernatants of cells.

(H) ATP release was quantified by ENLITE 15 h after treatment in the supernatant of cells.

FIGS. 29A-D: Digoxin restores anti-cancer immunogenicity in vivo.

(A) U2OS, CT26 and MCA cells have been treated for 24 h with the indicated concentration of drugs, and cell death has been assessed by measuring Annexin/DAPI by mean of FACS

(B) CRT exposure was analysed in the cells that were single or cotreated as indicated by means of CRT surface staining and FACS quantification.

(C) MCA205 cells have been used for tumor vaccination in vivo. Cells treated overnight (O/N) with 1 μM MTX, 20 μM MitoC with or without 30 μM Digoxin have been inoculated subcutaneously into the flank of C56BL/6 mice. The mice have been rechallenged after 6 days with living cells and the tumor growth is depicted in the survival plot (n=10). Digoxin used as single treatment caused tumor growth on the vaccination side and did not preclude the living cells from forming a tumor after rechallenge.

(D) D1: Overall survival of 150 breast cancer patients. 50 digoxin cotreated patients are opposed by 100 non digoxin treated controls.

Subgroup analysis depict anthracycline based chemotherapy with and without digoxin cotreatment and non anthracycline based therapy with and without digoxin cotreatment.

D2: Overall survival of 60 breast cancer patients anthracycline based chemotherapy. 20 digoxin cotreated patients are opposed by 40 non digoxin treated controls.

D3: Overall survival of 90 breast cancer patients non anthracycline based therapy. 30 digoxin cotreated patients are opposed by 60 non digoxin treated controls.

FIGS. 30A-B: The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in NLRP4 (rs302453) affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy in terms of pathological complete response (pCR) in a neoadjuvant setting in breast cancer patients (n=443).

The NLRP4-rs302453 Gln925Leu polymorphism was genotyped in three cohorts (REMAGUS, Dijon, Houston).

A) The meta-analysis combining the results of the three studies revealed that the proportion of pathological complete responses was higher in NLRP4-rs302453 mutated group than in wild-type group of patients treated with anthracyclines. The Chi2 test was used.

B) The association between the NLRP4-rs302453 SNP and the pCR phenotype was confirmed by multivariate analyses using logistic regression by taking into account the effects of classical clinical factors. The NLRP4-rs302453 SNP appeared independently associated to pCR. The adjusted p-value, the odd ratio (OR) and the 95% confidence interval are displayed.

FIGS. 31A-B: The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in NLRP4 (rs302453) affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy in terms of metastasis free survival in a neoadjuvant setting in breast cancer patients (n=441).

The meta-analysis combining the results of three survival studies based on univariate (A) and multivariate (B) approaches in REMAGUS, Dijon and Houston cohorts revealed that the NLRP4-rs302453 was associated with a lower frequency of metastasis in patients carrying the NLRP4 Gln925Leu mutated allele than in patient carrying the normal allele. The Log Rank test was used in the univariate analysis. The Kaplan-Meier curves are displayed (A). A Cox model was used in the multivariate analysis. The adjusted p-value, the odd ratio (OR) and the 95% confidence interval are displayed (B).

FIG. 32:

Using a non biased selection of immune SNPs associated with shorter time to progression among a multiplex 356 SNP genotyping based on fluorescent PCR (Veracode Illumina) in a cohort of 280 N+ adjuvant BC patients and 360 neoadjuvant BC, inventors identified two additional SNPs (located in DDX58/RIG-I and CX3CR1 encoding a cytosolic receptor detecting viral nucleic acids, and fractalkine respectively) in adjuvant and two highly significant SNPs in neoadjuvant (MTHFR: rs1801133 and FAT2: rs1432862) in a multivariate Cox model (integrating proliferation index and HR status).

FIGS. 33A-D: The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in DDX58, CX3CR1 and FAT2 affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy.

(A) Cross-validated accuracy and AUC for the three families of signatures, as a function of the number of factors in the signature, for the RCH endpoint.

(B) ROC curves for the RCH signature trained on HOUSTON and tested on REMAGUS. Inventors compare the purely clinical signature (left) to the clinical+2 SNP signature (right).

(C) AUC (left) and accuracy (right) of the signatures of various sizes trained on HOUSTON, and tested on REMAGUS.

(D) Predictive value of DDX58 and FAT2 in a third independent cohort (Dacier cohort) of neoadjuvant breast cancer (BC) as predictive factors of disease free survival.

FIG. 34: Experimental Setting

FIGS. 35A-D: Genes regulated 2 and 8 days after doxorubicin treatment.

(A) Rsad2, Dhx58, Ifi205, Il12a, Trim30 and Oas2 genes are specifically up-regulated in the CD45 negative fraction 2 days after doxorubicin treatment. DX: doxorubicin. (n=6 mice)

(B) Mx1, Mx2, Ifnb1, Ifit2, Il15, Irf7 genes are specifically up-regulated in the CD45 negative fraction 2 days after doxorubicin treatment. DX: doxorubicin. (n=6 mice)

(C) Cxcl10, Ccl2, Ccl3, Ccl4, Ccl7 and Cxcl1 genes are specifically up-regulated in the CD45 negative fraction 2 days after doxorubicin treatment. DX: doxorubicin. (n=6 mice)

(D) Mavs, Irf1, Tnf and Irf3 are unchanged in the CD45 negative fraction 2 days after doxorubicin treatment. DX: doxorubicin. (n=6 mice)

FIG. 36:

IgA and IgG dosage in sera from Healthy Volunteers (HV) and Breast Cancer Patients (BC). Cut-off values were calculated as 60 AU for IgA anti-CRT antibodies and 90 AU for IgG anti-CRT antibodies.

FIG. 37:

Percentage of positive samples for anti-Calreticulin IgA and IgG in Healthy Volunteers (HV) and Breast Cancer Patients (BC). Cut-off values were calculated as 60 AU for IgA anti-calreticulin antibodies and 90 AU for IgG anti-calreticulin antibodies.

FIG. 38:

The level of 1 g anti-Calreticulin at the diagnosis and the capacity to develop a humoral response during chemotherapy treatment are associated to clinical response to anthracyclines and metastasis free survival. pCR: pathological Complete Response.

FIGS. 39A-B:

(A) Immunohistochemistry of ER stress response markers (eif2a phosphorylation, CRT, ERp57 and HMGB1) in BC at diagnosis in FFPE.

(B) The panel is a graph summarizing scoring.

FIG. 40: The core machinery of autophagy is indispensable for ATP release during exposure with immunogenic chemotherapies.

FIG. 40 upper panel. The percentages of Quinacrine negative cells, assessed by immunofluorescence (GFP emission) represent the proportions of cells that have lost intracellular ATP. The positive control for autophagy induction is starvation.

FIG. 40 lower panel. ATP release is indirectly measured by the percentages of cancer cells that have lost quinacrine expression.

FIG. 41: Induction of autophagy in vivo following chemotherapy of established tumors.

Redistribution of LC3-GFP in autophagosomes can be visualized post-therapy with both cytotoxic agents (mitoxanthrone MTX and oxaliplatin) as shown in representative micrograph pictures (upper panels). The lower panel is a graph summarizing enumeration of autophagosomes positive cells in 10 independent sections per tumor and animal (each dot represents one tumor). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 42: Prophylactic immunization with dying tumor cells is impaired when dying cells are autophagy-deficient.

The % of tumor free animals are shown in the graph and the number of animals per group is indicated (n=20). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 43: Compensatory therapy for autophagy deficient cells: apyrase inhibitors restore the immunogenicity of autophagy-deficient dying tumor cells.

The % of tumor free animals are shown in the graph and the number of animals per group is indicated (n=20). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 44: Autophagy-deficient tumors failed to properly respond to chemotherapy unless apyrase inhibitors are coadministered along with chemotherapy.

Left graphs show that when apyrase inhibitors (AI) are co-administered locally in tumor beds along with chemotherapy (iv inoculated), tumors start to regress with the cytotoxic agent. Monitoring of tumor growth was recorded with a caliper (product of perpendicular diameters) and is depicted for 5 mice/group. Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 45: TLR4 agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatine

PBS treated mice cannot control the tumor growth whereas chemotherapy-treated mice are able to do so. Dendrophilin combined with Chemotherapy increases the control of the tumor growth, meaning that TLR4 agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatin in 2 tumor models.

FIG. 46: 4-1BB agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatine

PBS treated mice cannot control the tumor growth whereas chemotherapy-treated mice are able to do so. 4-1BB agonist combined with Chemotherapy increases the control of the tumor growth, meaning that 4-1BB agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatin in 2 tumor models.

FIGS. 47A-H: Nuclear HMGB1 is weakly expressed in established mouse tumors.

(A) Typical staining of paraffin-embedded CT26 and MCA205 cell lines cultured in vitro, or after ex vivo conditioning and at day 12 and 22 post-inoculation in BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice using anti-HMGB1 Ab. Control stainings using an isotype control antibody indicated no specific labelling of nuclei or cytoplasms (not shown).

(B) Enumeration of positive nuclear stainings in cell lines or in vivo established CT26 and MCA205 tumors at day 12 or 22 out of 100 tumor cells observed in 5 different field at ×20 magnification.

(C) Typical staining of paraffin-embedded CT26 and MCA205 cell lines transfected with siRNA HMGB1.

(D) Western Blotting showing the loss of HMGB1 expression in polyclonal CT26 and MCA205 tumors transfected with siRNA HMGB1 (but not with scrambled siRNA controls).

(E) Using immunohistochemistery, we studied the nuclear expression of HMGB1 in tumor samples from 232 patients with localized breast cancer treated in two French cancer center (Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, and centre Georges François Leclerc, Dijon France). Patients were treated by surgery followed by anthracycline-based adjuvant chemotherapy, radiotherapy if required.

In 84 tumors (36%), breast cancer cells harbored a strong nuclear expression (E, upper panel), whereas 148 (64%) tumors had no nuclear expression of HMGB1 (E, lower panel). (F) Nuclear expression of HMGB1 was studied according to tumor size (pathologic tumor stage, eg: pT1 if tumor size was ≦2 cm, and at least pT2 if tumor size was >2 cm).

Lack of HMGB1 nuclear expression (black) was more frequent in large breast tumors (>2 cm), when compared to smaller tumors (<2 cm) (70% vs 56%, p=0.042, Chi2 test).

(G-H) Dendrophilin has a similar bioactivity in combination with anthracyclines when injected intravenously (iv) (systemically) or intratumorally (it).

MCA205 was inoculated sc and doxorubicine intratumorally. Dendrophylline was injected either iv or it at day 2 and day 4 post-doxorubicine and tumor growth was monitored. A similar synergistic effect with these two routes was observed. The mean tumor sizes of 10 animals/groups are depicted in A. and each tumor kinetics is shown in B.

FIGS. 48A-C: Synergistic effects between a TLR4/Myd88 agonist and immunogenic chemotherapeutic compounds.

A. Experimental setting. d: day, C: chemotherapy, D: dendrophilin. Day 7 established tumors (EL4 (B), MCA205 or CT26 (C) syngeneic of C57BL/6 (EL4, MCA205) or BALB/c mice (CT26) were treated with chemotherapy (intratumoral (C) or iv (B) injections of oxaliplatine (B) or anthracyclines (C)) followed by two iv administrations of Dendrophyllin (day 2 and day 4). Tumor growth was monitored and graphs represent mean tumor sizes±SEM of 5-8 mice/group. Student t′ test or Anova: *p<0.05, **p<0.01.

FIGS. 49A-E: Optimizing the scheduling of TLR4/myd88 agonist with chemotherapy.

The frequency of TLR4/Myd88 agonists was analyzed by comparing one versus two inoculations of dendrophylin, either at day 2 only, or day 4 only or day 2+4 post-anthracyclines in the MCA205 tumor model. The tumor growth kinetics was monitored and the number of tumor free mice annotated parentheses. The injection at day 2 was crucial for the synergistic antitumor effects of the combination therapy (anthracyclines+TLR4 agonist).

FIGS. 50A-C: Long term survival benefit using repeated cycles of concomitant chemoimmunotherapy.

A. Similar experimental setting as in FIG. 48A but each cycle is repeated every other 12 days.

B. Tumor growth curves for each mouse (N=15/group).

C. Kaplan Meier survival curves for all 15 mice/group. Cox analyses ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 51A-C: Effects of various TLR4 agonists on the efficacy of chemotherapy.

Several TLR4 agonists (TRIF/Myd88-dependent agonists such as LPS (A-B), or Myd88-dependent agonists (B, C) such as DEN S or DEN A) were co-administered with doxorubicin (A, B, C right panel) or oxaliplatine (C, left panel). Tumor (MCA205 or EL4) growth curves (means±SEM) are depicted. Student t′ test comparing chemotherapy alone versus chemotherapy+Dendrophilin-treated groups. *p<0.05**p<0.01.

FIG. 52: Myd88 but not TRIF is involved in the synergistic effects achieved with the chemoimmunotherapy.

EL4 was established in two mouse species (TRIF (A)- or Myd88 (B)-deficient). Day 7-established tumors were treated according to the experimental setting described in FIG. 48A. Tumor growth curves (means±SEM) are depicted. *p<0.05 Student t′ test comparing PBS and Oxaliplatine+Dendrophilin-treated groups.

FIGS. 53A-D: Chemoimmunotherapy promotes the accumulation of myelomonocytic and TH1/Tc1 infiltrates in tumor beds.

A-D. Flow cytometry analyses of several leukocytic subsets (CD45+ (A), CD11b+(B, C), CD3+ (D), gating on live cells after tumor harvesting at day 15 post-tumor inoculation. Intracellular staining of T lymphocytes investigating IFNg secretion after PMA/ionomycine 4 hr restimulation (D). Subsets of myeloid cells analyzed on CD11b+CD45+ cells were analyzed using anti-Ly6G and Ly6C antibodies (B). Each dot represents one tumor. The data of three experiments are pooled for each group. Student t′ test comparing all groups in a paired manner. *p<0.05**p<0.01 ***p<0.001.

FIGS. 54A-E: Dendrophilin compensates for the lack of immunogenicity of HMGB1 deficient tumors.

A-E. Knock down of HMGB1 in MCA205 tumors compromise the efficacy of the vaccine but can be compensated with a TLR4 agonist (DEN). Graphs depict the growth curves of the rechallenge after immunization of naïve mice with dying tumor cells+/−DEN. N=15 mice/groups (gathering 2 independent experiments). E. The percentages of growth inhibition comparing each group of mice with unvaccinated animals is shown. Student test comparing all groups in a paired manner. *p<0.05**p<0.01***p<0.001.

FIGS. 55A-B: HMGB1 loss of nuclear staining as a negative predictive marker for the response to adjuvant chemotherapy in early breast cancer.

A. IHC stainings (left panel: HMGB1 positive, right panel: HMGB1 negative) About 30% of early BC present with a normal HMGB1 nuclear staining at diagnosis while the rest (⅔) are negative and require compensatory therapies.

B. HMGB1 loss of nuclear staining is associated with early relapse in early BC, the most significant result in multivariate analyses (taking into account all prognosis markers for BC) being obtained in lymph node N+ positive patients or triple negative breast cancers.

FIG. 56: Typical LC3 cytosolic puncta stainings.

A series of 150 early breast cancers embedded in paraffin was stained with an anti-LC3-II antibody. The staining should be depicted such as dots included in the cytosol of tumor cells in more than 10% tumor cells. When less than 10% BC contain cytosolic LC3+ dots (featuring autophagosomes), the BC is considered negative and autophagy deficient. Autophagy deficient tumors are doomed to relapse earlier post-adjuvant chemotherapy.

FIG. 57:

Autophagy deficient tumors have a shorter time to relapse compared with autophagy proficient early breast cancers treated with adjuvant anthracyclines.

Multivariate analysis (taking into account the number of invaded lymph nodes, the grade (SBR) and the tumor size at diagnosis and the hormone receptor status) performed on a cohort of 150 early Her2 negative BC treated with anthracyclines, cyclophosphamide, 5FU and radiotherapy.

FIG. 58: Stratification of BC patients according to HMGB1 nuclear staining and LC3-II cytosolic puncta.

Combining both markers allows to better dissect responders from non responders. Similar cohort as in FIGS. 55 and 57. When a loss of nuclear HMGB1 is combined with a loss of LC3+ cytosolic puncta, chemotherapy fails to add benefit on long term survival.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Inventors have herein discovered an ordered sequence of molecular events in the pathway leading to the immunogenic cell death of tumour cells.

This pathway may be interrupted at several levels, by the loss of a positive mediator or by the presence of an inhibitor of such a positive mediator. The result of such an interruption will be the absence of reaction of the subject's immune system, in other words, the absence of “immunogenic cell death”.

Inventors herein below identify particular products the detection of which can be used to determine if a subject will respond or not to a cancer treatment.

Inventors further herein below provide methods which can be used (i) to determine the presence of an immunogenic response in a subject having a tumor, (ii) to determine the presence or level of exposure of particular proteins on the surface of tumour cells or of immune cells (as herein defined), (iii) to determine the presence or level of expression of particular proteins secreted by tumor cells or immune cells, (iv) to determine the susceptibility of a tumour cell to a cancer treatment, and/or (v) to determine if a subject will respond to a cancer treatment or will be resistant to said treatment.

“Immunogenic Cell Death”

Cell death can be classified according to the morphological appearance of the lethal process (that may be apoptotic, necrotic, autophagic or associated with mitosis), enzymological criteria (with and without the involvement of nucleases or distinct classes of proteases, like caspases), functional aspects (programmed or accidental, physiological or pathological) or immunological characteristics (immunogenic or non-immunogenic) (Kroemer et al., 2009).

Thanks to the advancing comprehension of cellular demise, it has become clear that the textbook equation ‘programmed cell death=apoptosis=caspase activation=non-immunogenic cell death’, although applicable to some instances of cell death, constitutes an incorrect generalization, at several levels (Garg et al., 2009). Thus, necrosis can be programmed both in its course and its occurrence (Vandenabeele et al., 2008). Apoptosis can be lethal without caspase activation, and caspase activation does not necessarily cause cell death (Kroemer and Martin, 2005). Finally, cell death with an apoptotic appearance can be immunogenic (Casares et al., 2005). These examples illustrate the urgent need to strive towards a more detailed comprehension of cell death subroutines.

Cell death is defined by Casares et al. (2005) as “immunogenic” if dying cells that express a specific antigen (such as the model antigen ovalbumin OVA or a tumor antigen), yet are uninfected (and hence lack pathogen-associated molecular patterns), and are injected subcutaneously into mice, in the absence of any adjuvant, cause a protective immune response against said specific antigen. Such a protective immune response precludes the growth of living transformed cells expressing the specific antigen injected into mice.

Inventors demonstrate that when cancer cells succumb to an immunogenic cell death (or immunogenic apoptosis) modality, they alert the immune system, which then mounts a therapeutic anti-cancer immune response and contributes to the eradication of residual tumor cells. Conversely, when cancer cells succumb to a non-immunogenic death modality, they fail to elicit such a protective immune response.

“Anti-Cancer Immune Response”

The response from the immune system is herein called an “anti-cancer immune response” when it is directed against tumour cells, in particular cancerous cells. The anticancer immune response is allowed by a reaction from the immune system of the subject to the presence of cells, preferably of tumor cells, dying from an immunogenic cell death (as defined previously).

Preferably, the anti-cancer immune response allows, at least partly, the regression or destruction of the tumor.

In the context of the present invention, the patient or subject is a mammal. In a particular embodiment, the mammal is a human being, whatever its age or sex. The patient may have a tumor. Unless otherwise specified in the present disclosure, the tumor is a malignant tumor.

An in vitro or ex vivo method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a treatment of cancer is herein provided as a particular embodiment. This method comprises a step of detecting the presence of an anticancer immune response of the subject, the absence of an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

Within the context of this invention, “non-responder” or “resistant” refers to the phenotype of a subject who does not respond to a treatment of cancer, in particular to a conventional treatment of cancer as previously defined, i.e. the volume of the tumor does not substantially decrease, or the symptoms of the cancer in the subject are not alleviated, or the cancer progresses, for example the volume of the tumor increases and/or the tumor generates local or distant metastasis. The terms “non-responder” or “resistant” also refer to the phenotype of a subject who will die from the cancer.

Within the context of this invention, “responder” or “sensitive” refers to the phenotype of a patient who responds to a treatment of cancer, in particular to a conventional treatment of cancer as previously defined, i.e. the volume of the tumor is decreased, at least one of his symptoms is alleviated, or the development of the cancer is stopped, or slowed down.

A subject who responds to a cancer treatment is, in the sense of the present invention, a subject who typically has a much longer disease free survival chance than a patient who has been identified, with a method as herein described, as resistant to a treatment of cancer. Typically, a subject who responds to a cancer treatment is a subject who will be completely treated (cured). Within the context of this invention, the term pathological complete response (“pCR”) means that the tumor size dramatically decreases under chemotherapy, typically after a neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and then becomes operable or undetectable.

Typically, a subject who responds to a cancer treatment is a subject who will be completely treated (cured), i.e., a subject who will survive to the cancer [the detected or measured parameter (for example the expression product of gene as herein disclosed) has a beneficial impact on the “overall survival” (OS)].

A subject who responds to a cancer treatment is also, in the sense of the present invention, a subject who typically has a much longer disease free survival (DFS) or metastasis free survival chance than a patient who has been identified, with a method as herein described, as resistant to a treatment of cancer.

The sensitivity or susceptibility of a subject to a treatment of cancer indicates whether the subject is “responder” or “non-responder”, in other words whether the subject will or will not, be at least partially treated (tumor growth retardation or regression), preferably be completely treated (cured), by said cancer treatment.

In a particular and preferred embodiment of the present invention, the subject is typically a subject undergoing a treatment of cancer, in particular a conventional treatment of cancer (preferably chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy). This means that, typically, before assessing the sensitivity of the subject to a particular treatment of cancer, this subject has been exposed to said particular treatment of cancer. The subject may have been exposed to part of a complete conventional treatment protocol, for example to at least one cycle of the all treatment protocol, for example two cycles of the all treatment protocol.

In another particular embodiment of the present invention, the method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject to a treatment of cancer is applied on a subject who has not been previously exposed to a treatment of cancer. Preferably the serum of such a subject is free of anti-CRT antibodies.

Methods herein described are predictive methods, i.e., methods capable of assessing the ability of a subject to mount an immune response in the context of an anthracycline, oxaliplatine or X Rays treatment as herein defined and not only prognostic methods, only capable of indicating whether the subject will survive to the cancer or die from the cancer.

In the context of the present invention, a “conventional treatment of cancer” may be selected from a chemotherapy, a radiotherapy, an hormonotherapy, an immunotherapy, a specific kinase inhibitor-based therapy, an antiangiogenic agent based-therapy, an antibody-based therapy, in particular a monoclonal antibody-based therapy, and surgery.

The term “conventionally” means that the therapy is applied or, if not routinely applied, is appropriate and at least recommended by health authorities. The “conventional” treatment is selected by the cancerologist depending on the specific cancer to be prevented or treated.

In the present invention, the cancer is a cancer that is usually or conventionally treated with one of the following therapy: a chemotherapy, a radiotherapy, an hormonotherapy, an immunotherapy, a specific kinase inhibitor-based therapy, an antiangiogenic agent based-therapy, an antibody-based therapy and a surgery.

The cancer may be any kind of cancer or neoplasia. The cancer is preferably selected from a breast cancer, a prostate cancer, an oesophagus cancer, a colon cancer, a rectal cancer, a kidney cancer, a lung cancer, in particular a non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), a thyroid cancer, an osteosarcoma, a gastrointestinal sarcoma (GIST), a melanoma, a leukaemia, in particular an acute lymphoid leukemia, an Hodgkin lymphoma, and a neuroblastoma.

The tumour cell mentioned in the present invention is a cell obtained from a tumor of a subject suffering from a cancer, in particular from at least one of the previously identified cancers. The tumor cell is preferably selected from a carcinoma, a sarcoma, a lymphoma, a melanoma, a paediatric tumour and a leukaemia tumour.

It is to be understood that the expression “tumor cells” used to identify cells obtained from a tumor of a subject, is also used, in the present description, to identify circulating tumor cells (in the case of leukaemia for example), cells obtained from a tumor bed, or cells obtained from a metastase.

A hormonotherapy is a therapy leading to apoptosis or Fas ligands or soluble/membrane bound TRAIL (TNF-related-apoptosis-inducing-ligand) or soluble/membrane bound TNF (tumor necrosis factor) alpha (TNFa). Cancers sensitive to a hormonotherapy are conventionally treated using a compound such as an antiaromatase for example.

Cancers sensitive to an immunotherapy are conventionally treated using a compound selected for example from IL-2 (Interleukine-2), IFN (Interferon) alpha (IFNa), and a vaccine.

Cancers sensitive to a specific kinase inhibitor-based therapy are conventionally treated using a compound selected for example from a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, a serine kinase inhibitor and a threonine kinase inhibitor.

Cancers sensitive to an antibody-based therapy, preferably to a monoclonal antibody-based therapy are conventionally treated using a specific antibody such as for example anti-CD20 (pan B-Cell antigen) or anti-Her2/Neu (Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor-2/NEU).

Preferably, the conventional treatment of cancer is a conventional chemotherapy or a conventional radiotherapy.

In the context of a conventional radiotherapy, the treatment may consist in exposing the subject to an irradiation selected for example from XR, gamma irradiations and/or UVC irradiations.

In the context of a conventional chemotherapy, the treatment may use a cytotoxic agent or cell death inducer (chemotherapeutic agent), in particular a genotoxic agent.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the chemotherapeutic agent is an agent selected for example from an anthracyclin, an antimitotic agent (spindle poison such as vincristine or vinblastine), a DNA intercalating agent, a taxane (such as docetaxel, larotaxel, cabazitaxel, paclitaxel (PG-paclitaxel and DHA-paclitaxel), ortataxel, tesetaxel, and taxoprexin), gemcitabine, etoposide, mitomycine C, an alkylating agent, a platin based component such as CDDP and OXP, and a TLR (Toll-like receptor)-3 ligand.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, in particular when chemotherapy is administered to the subject before any surgical step, the chemotherapeutic agent is not a taxane, and preferably also not an antimitotic agent.

Particular anthracyclins may be selected, in the context of the present invention, from DX, daunorubicin, idarubicin and MTX.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the antibody used in an antibody-based therapy is a cytotoxic antibody.

A particular breast cancer is a breast cancer conventionally treated with anthracyclins, taxanes, Herceptin, anti-PARP (Poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase), anti-PI3K (Phosphoinositide 3-kinase), mTOR (mammalian Target of Rapamycin) inhibitors, navelbine, gemcitabine, antioestrogens, antiaromatases, and/or a TLR-3 ligand, before or after a surgical step to remove breast tumor, preferably before such a surgical step.

A particular thyroid cancer is a thyroid cancer treated with radioactive iodine or tyrosine kinase inhibitors, preferably RET inhibitors.

A particular Hodgkin lymphoma is a Hodgkin lymphoma conventionally treated with CHOP [Cyclophosphamide, Hydroxydaunorubicin, Oncovin (vincristine), and Prednisone and/or Prednisolone] or anthracyclines.

A particular prostate cancer is a prostate cancer conventionally treated with taxanes and XR.

A particular colon cancer is a colon cancer conventionally treated with OXP and/or the combination of 5-fluorouracil (5 FU) and folinic acid.

A particular metastatic colon cancer is a metastatic colon cancer conventionally treated with 5 FU and OXP or irinothecan.

A particular rectal cancer is a rectal cancer conventionally treated with radiotherapy, preferably local radiotherapy, preferably together with CDDP and/or 5 FU.

A particular oesophagus cancer is an oesophagus cancer treated with CDDP, before or after a surgical step to remove the oesophagus tumor, preferably before such a surgical step, the administration of CDDP being preferably combined to the administration to the patient of a radiotherapy, preferably a local radiotherapy.

A particular kidney cancer is a kidney cancer conventionally treated with cytokines or antiangiogenic drugs (sorafenib).

A particular lung cancer is a lung cancer conventionally treated with XR and platine or Permetrexed (Alimta®).

A particular early stage NSCLC is an NSCLC conventionally treated with CDDP and/or etoposide, or with taxanes and avastin [anti-VEGF (Vascular endothelial growth factor) antibody].

A particular osteosarcoma and a preferred GIST are respectively an osteosarcoma and a GIST conventionally treated with anthracyclins, imatinib (Gleevec®) and/or sunitinib.

A particular melanoma is a melanoma conventionally treated with dacarbazine (DTIC); B-Raf inhibitors (PLX4032); sorafenib and/or temozolomide; electrochemotherapy; or isolated limb perfusion of TNFalpha, in particular of high doses of TNFalpha.

A particular neuroblastome is a neuroblastome conventionally treated with anthracyclines or alkylating agents, in particular in the context of autologous bone marrow transplantation or of stem cells transplantation.

A particular acute lymphoid leukemia is an acute lymphoid leukemia treated with anthracyclins, vinblastine and/or vincristine.

A particular multiple myeloma is a malignant hemopathy treated with anthracyclins, bortezomiv, revlimide, thalidomide and/or an alkylating agent, in particular in the context of autologous bone marrow or stem cell transplantation.

Conventional treatments of cancer, as described previously, in particular radio- and chemotherapy, are thought to mediate the direct elimination of tumour cells. Although different anti-tumour agents may kill tumor cells through an apparently homogenous apoptotic pathway, they differ in their ability to stimulate the subject's immune system. Indeed, there are circumstances in which anti-cancer therapy can induce a cellular death (immunogenic cell death) eliciting innate and cognate immune responses which in turn mediate part of the anti-tumour effect. Inventors herein demonstrate that all cases of complete therapeutic success (cure) involve an immunological component.

As indicated previously, it is possible to distinguish between conventional treatments of cancer able to induce an immunogenic cell death, herein identified as “conventional immunogenic treatments”, and conventional treatments of cancer which induce or tend to induce a non-immunogenic cell death, herein identified as “conventional non-immunogenic treatments”.

As indicated previously, most of standard chemotherapies are known to induce a non-immunogenic apoptosis (Zitvogel et al., 2004; Steinman et al., 2004; Lake et al., 2006). OXP and anthracyclines in particular induce immunogenic cell death, as do radiotherapy (ionizing radiations), while other agents such as CDDP and alkylating agents tend to induce a non-immunogenic cell death (Casares et al., 2005; Obeid et al., 2007), as do etoposide, 5-FU and mitomycin C.

A typical in vitro method used to assess the immunogenicity of a particular drug comprises the steps of:

(a) inducing the cell death or apoptosis of mammalian cells (for example cells from the CT26 or MCA205 mouse cell line), typically of mammalian cells capable of expressing calreticulin (CRT), by exposing said mammalian cells to a particular drug, for example 18 hours;

(b) inoculating (for example intradermally) the dying mammalian cells from step (a) in a particular area (for example a flank) of the mammal, typically a mouse, to induce an immune response in this area of the mammal;

(c) inoculating (for example intradermally) the minimal tumorigenic dose of syngeneic live tumor cells in a distinct area (for example the opposite flank) from the same mammal, for example 7 days after step (b); and

(d) comparing the size of the tumor in the inoculated mammal with a control mammal also exposed to the minimal tumorigenic dose of syngeneic live tumor cells of step (c) [for example a mouse devoid of T lymphocyte], the stabilization or regression of the tumor in the inoculated mammal being indicative of the drug immunogenicity.

Inventors herein demonstrate that a subject having a tumor may however resist even to a conventional immunogenic treatment as previously identified and/or defined.

Herein provided is therefore an in vitro or ex vivo method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor, as previously defined, to a treatment of cancer, in particular to a conventional immunogenic treatment, which method comprises a step of determining the ability of the subject and/or of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, the inability of at least one of the subject and of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

Immune Cells

Inventors demonstrate the critical role of subsets of cells from the immune system, herein identified as “immune cells”, which reveal the presence of an anticancer immune response from a subject having a tumor. Preferably, this subject has been exposed to a treatment of cancer, in particular to at least one conventional treatment of cancer.

In a particular embodiment, a method of assessing the sensitivity of a subject having a tumor to a treatment of cancer is herein provided, wherein the method comprises a step of detecting the presence of immune cells selected in particular from γδ T lymphocytes, dendritic cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, in a tumor sample of the subject.

In a preferred embodiment, the previously described method is applied on a subject who has not been exposed to a treatment of cancer. This method may further be applied to the same subject after said subject has been exposed to a treatment of cancer, in particular to a chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer, preferably to several cycles, for example two, three or four cycles of a complete chemotherapeutic treatment.

The method may further comprise a step of comparing the presence of immune cells in a tumor sample of the subject before and after exposition of the subject to a treatment of cancer as explained previously.

This method may be applied in vitro or ex vivo on a biological sample or biopsy from the subject, in particular on a tumor sample or biopsy, on a biopsy of cells from the tumor bed, on cytospins, on cells from a metastase, or on circulating tumor cells.

The presence of immune cells in the tumor of a subject is indicative of the presence of an anticancer immune response in the subject who has been exposed to a treatment of cancer and reveals the sensitivity of the subject to the treatment of cancer (responder phenotype).

The absence of immune cells in the tumor of a subject is indicative of the absence of an anticancer immune response in the subject who has been exposed to a treatment of cancer and reveals a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer (non responder phenotype).

The γδ T lymphocytes, the presence of which may be checked in the previously described method, are preferably selected from Vγ4⁺ γδ T lymphocytes (mouse), in particular activated Vγ4⁺ γδ T lymphocytes; Vδ2 (or Vδ1 in humans) T lymphocytes; Vγ6⁺ γδ T lymphocytes, in particular activated Vγ6⁺ γδ T lymphocytes; IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes (also herein called “γδ T17 cells”), in particular cells expressing RORγt (RAR-related orphan receptor), AHR (aryl hydrocarbone receptor), IL-23R, IL-17A and/or IL-22; γδ T lymphocytes expressing the IL-1 receptor (IL-1R or IL-1R1); and any combination of the previously mentioned γδ T lymphocytes such as, in particular IL-17 producing—Vγ4⁺ and Vγ6⁺ γδ T lymphocytes, preferably expressing the IL-1R.

The previously mentioned γδ T lymphocytes populations identify populations of mammalian cells. Human γδ T lymphocytes have Vδ2 (circulating) T lymphocytes but no Vd2 (mucosal) T lymphocytes, contrary to mouse γδ T lymphocytes. Both populations of Vδ2 and Vd2 T lymphocytes are however able to differentiate into VγdT17 cells.

It is to note that the Vγδ T lymphocytes, in particular those present in tumor beds, have the following phenotype: Ki67⁺, GzB⁺, CD69⁺ and IL-17⁺, when they are activated.

The dendritic cells, the presence of which may be checked in the previously described method, are preferably selected from myeloid cells (such as monocytic cells and macrophages) expressing langerin, MHC (major histocompatibility complex) class II, CCR2 (chemokine (C—C motif) receptor 2), CX3CR1 and/or Gr1 molecules in mice; myeloid cells expressing CD14, CD16, HLA dR (human leukocyte antigen disease resistance) molecule, langerin, CCR2 and/or CX3CR1 in humans; dendritic cells expressing CD11c, MHC class II molecules, and/or CCR7 molecules; and IL-1β producing dendritic cells.

The cytotoxic T lymphocytes, the presence of which may be checked in the previously described method, are preferably selected from CD3+, CD4+ and/or CD8+ T lymphocytes, FOXP3 (forkhead box P3) T lymphocytes, Granzyme B/TIA (Tcell-restricted intracellular antigen) T lymphocytes, and Tc1 cells (IFN-γ producing CD8+ T lymphocytes).

Other immune cells, the presence of which may be checked in the previously described method, are cells expressing a CRT receptor.

Such immune cells may be selected from cells expressing at least one of the following proteins: LRP1 (Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1, CD91), Ca⁺⁺-binding proteins such as SCARF1 and SCARF2, MSR1 (Macrophage scavenger receptor 1), SRA, CD59 (protectin), CD207 (langerin), and THSD1 (thrombospondin).

The detection step of the previously identified immune cells can be easily performed according to methods known by the man of the art such as immunochemistry, immunophenotyping, flow cytometry, Elispots assays (Panaretakis T. et al., 2009), classical tetramer stainings (Ghiringhelli F, et al., 2009), intracellular cytokine stainings, (Conforti R et al., 2010).

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the step of determining the presence of an anticancer immune response may consist in detecting and/or dosing, in a biological sample of the patient, for example in a blood or serum sample of the patient, the presence (or normal expression) of a particular cytokine, a particular chemokine, and/or of particular antibody, the absence or abnormal expression (in particular an insufficient amount), when compared to a standard expression (for example level of expression), of the particular cytokine, of the particular chemokine and/or of the particular antibody being indicative of an absent or insufficient anticancer immune response.

The cytokine the presence of which is to be determined according to the previously described method may be selected from IL-1b, IL-7, IL-10, IL-12a, IL-12b, IL-15, IL-17, IL-21, IL-23, IL-27, IL-33, TNFa, LTbeta (lymphotoxin beta), IFNalpha, beta, lambda, gamma, and the following cytokine receptors [ST2/IL1rl1, IL-1R1, IL-7r, IL-15Ra, IL-21R, IL-23R, LtbR, AHR, Flt3 (fins-like tyrosine kinase receptor-3, CD135)] and the following transcription factors (RORc, RORgt, FOXP3, Ikaros, Id2, PU-1).

The chemokine the presence of which is to be determined according to the previously described method may be selected from CCL2 (Chemokine (C—C motif) ligand), CCL20/MIP3A, CCL5/RANTES, CCL7, CCL25, CXCL1, CXCL2, CXCL9/ITAC, CXCL10/IP10, CXCL12/SDF1, CXCL13, CXCL16/Bonzo, CX3CL1/Fractalkine, and their receptors (CXCR1, CXCR2, CXCR4, CXCR5, CXCR6, CCR2, CCR4, CCR5, CCR7, CX3CR1).

The antibody (Ab) the presence of which is to be determined according to the previously described method may be selected from anti-CRT Ab, anti-NY-ESO1 Ab, anti-LAGE1 Ab, anti-MICA/B Ab, anti-disulfide isomerase ERp5 Ab, anti-PARP1 Ab, anti-ZNF707 (zinc finger protein) Ab in combination with PTMA (prothymosin, alpha), anti-CEP78 (centrosomal protein) Ab, anti-ODF2 (outer dense fiber of sperm tail 2) Ab, anti-SDCCAG1 (serologically defined colon cancer antigen 1) Ab, anti-endothelin 1 (ET-1) ligand Ab, anti-endothelin B receptor (ET_(B)R) Ab and anti-Rgs5 (regulator of G protein signalling 5) Ab.

Immunogenic Cell Death-Associated Molecules Found in the Tumor

The step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response consists in verifying, in the tumor cells (in particular in dying tumor cells, for example cells which have been exposed to a treatment of cancer), the presence of specific features herein disclosed and identified as “immunogenic cell death-associated molecules or signals” or “danger signals”.

Inventors herein demonstrate that stressed and dying tumor cells emit a particular pattern of “danger signals”. These immune cell death-associated molecules are either exposed on the surface of dying cells or secreted into the microenvironment. Thus, the combined action of ‘find-me’ signals (for the attraction of phagocytes) and ‘eat-me’ signals (for corps engulfment) together with the release of hidden molecules (which often signal danger and are usually secluded within live cells), influence the switch between silent corpse removal and inflammatory reactions that stimulate the cellular immune response.

Inventors discovered that some of said immunogenic cell death-associated molecules are inherent to the tumor, i.e., independent from the subject having the tumor or from the treatment the subject may have been exposed to. Others only appear in or around the tumor (for example in a tumor bed) after an exposition of the subject having the tumor to a conventional treatment of cancer.

Inventors have discovered, in the present invention, that if the tumor cells of the subject do not correctly or normally express a functional immunogenic cell death-associated molecule, such as one of the particular proteins identified below, in particular do not secrete such a molecule or do not expose such a molecule at their surface (or otherwise secrete or expose such a molecule at an abnormal level compared to a standard level), an additional treatment, herein identified as “compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer”, should be administered to said patient, preferably in addition to a conventional treatment of cancer, to favour a reaction from the immune system against said tumour cells.

The exposure or secretion can be observed or determined before or after exposition of the subject to a conventional therapy as described previously, preferably after such an exposition, even more preferably before and after such an exposition.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the method of determining the ability of a tumor to induce an anticancer immune response comprises a step of comparing the expression by tumor cells of functional immunogenic cell death-associated molecules before and after exposition of said tumor cells to a treatment of cancer.

An absent or abnormal (for example insufficient) level of expression of an immunogenic cell death-associated molecule by the tumor cell in response to a cancer treatment, in particular to a conventional one, indicates that the cell will not be, completely or partially, destroyed or eradicated by said cancer treatment.

In EP2084531, inventors have shown that the pre-apoptotic translocation of intracellular CRT (endo-CRT) to the plasma membrane surface (ecto-CRT) is a key feature of “immunogenic cell death”. They demonstrated that when CRT is exposed on the surface of dying cells, it promotes their destruction by phagocytes such as dendritic cells. Phagocytes then interact with the immune system which is, in turn, responsible for the immune response. Inventors further demonstrated (i) that this effect is amplified when CRT is present in an increased amount on the surface of dying cells and (ii) that CRT is present in an increased amount on the surface of most tumour cells of a subject who has been exposed to a conventional treatment of cancer, in particular a cell death inducer (apoptosis inducer).

Inventors also showed that the proteins whose expression level and post-transcriptional modification regulate CRT exposure comprise in particular:

-   -   at the level of ceramide metabolism: ceramide synthase,         dihydroceramide desaturase, 3-ketosphingane reductase, serine         palmitoyltransferase, sphingomyelin synthase, shingomyelinase,         ceramidase, ceramide synthase, sphingosine kinase,         sphingosine-1-phosphate phosphatase;     -   at the level of Bcl-2 proteins: Bax, Bak, Bok, Bcl-2, Bcl-XL,         Mcl-1 as well as all the other multidomain or BH3-only proteins         from the Bcl-2 family;     -   at the level of caspase-8 (CASP 8) activation and substrates:         FADD (Fas-Associated protein with Death Domain), FLIP         (FLICE-inhibitory protein), RIP (Receptor-interacting protein),         TRADD (Tumor necrosis factor receptor type 1-associated DEATH         domain), BAP31 (B-cell receptor-associated protein 31);     -   at the level of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response:         eIF2alpha (eIF2A), phosphorylated eIF2alpha, CRT, ERp57, GCN2,         HRI, PERK, PKR, PP1, GADD34, IRE1, PERK, HMGB1 and ATF6, BiP;     -   at the level of the CRT translocation machinery: CRT, ERp57,         KARS (lysyl-tRNA synthetase, LysRS), and KDEL receptor         (Lys-Asp-Glu-Leu endoplasmic reticulum protein retention         receptor).

In the context of the present invention, the step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may for example consist in verifying the correct expression, by tumour cells, of a protein allowing or enhancing CRT exposure at the surface of the cells (herein considered as an immunogenic cell death-associated molecule or immunogenic cell death marker). Such a protein may be anyone of the previously described proteins.

For example, such a protein may be selected in particular from CRT, CCL3 (MIP-1-alpha) (SEQ ID NO: 456); CCR1 (MIP1 alpha receptor, RANTES-R) (SEQ ID NO: 457); CCR2 (MCP-1 receptor) (SEQ ID NO: 458); CXCR1 (IL-8 Receptor type 1) (SEQ ID NO: 460); CXCR2 (IL-8 Receptor type 2) (SEQ ID NO: 461); TNFRSF10A or TRAIL-receptor 1 (SEQ ID NO: 462), TNFRSF10B or TRAIL-receptor 2 (SEQ ID NO: 463), TNFRSF10C or TRAIL-receptor 3 (SEQ ID NO: 464), TNFRSF10D or TRAIL-receptor 4 (SEQ ID NO: 465D), iNOS (Inducible NO synthase) (SEQ ID NO: 466); SOD2 (Superoxide dismutase 2) mitochondriale (SEQ ID NO: 467); E2AK3 (Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2-alpha kinase 3, PERK) (SEQ ID NO: 468), in particular phosphorylated PERK; E2AK2 (EIF2AK2, Interferon-induced double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase, PKR) (SEQ ID NO: 469); PP1 (Serine/threonine-protein phosphatases), in particular PP-1A (SEQ ID NO: 470), PP-1B (PPP1CB) (SEQ ID NO: 471) or PP-1G (PPP1CC) (SEQ ID NO: 472); PR15A (Protein phosphatase 1 regulatory subunit 15A, GADD34) (SEQ ID NO: 473); eIF-2A, in particular phosphorylated eIF-2A (SEQ ID NO: 474); SERCA (Sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPases), in particular SERCA1 (SEQ ID NO: 475), SERCA2 (SEQ ID NO: 476), SERCA3 (SEQ ID NO: 477); MAP kinase 8 (MAPK8 or JNK1) (SEQ ID NO: 478); MAP kinase 9 (MAPK9 or JNK2) (SEQ ID NO: 479); IKBKA (IKK-alpha, IKKA, NFKBIKA, TCF-16) (SEQ ID NO: 480); IKBKB (IKK-beta, IKK2, NFKBIKB) (SEQ ID NO: 481); NEMO (IKBKG, IKK-gamma, IKKAP1) (SEQ ID NO: 482); CASP-1 (IL-1BC, ICE), in particular activated CASP-1 (SEQ ID NO: 483); CASP-8 (MACH, FLICE) (SEQ ID NO: 484), in particular activated CASP-8; FADD (SEQ ID NO: 485); BAP31 (SEQ ID NO: 486) in particular cleaved BAP31; BAX (Bc12-L-4) (SEQ ID NO: 487); BAK (Bc12-L-7) (SEQ ID NO: 488); Bc1-2 (SEQ ID NO: 489); Bc12-L-1 (Bcl-X) (SEQ ID NO: 490); ERp57 (protein disulfide-isomerase A3, PDIA3, ERp60) (SEQ ID NO: 491); and LysRS (SEQ ID NO: 492).

The step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may also for example consist in verifying the correct expression (as defined previously), by tumour cells, of a protein expressed during the ER stress response and/or during the macroautophagic response of the subject's immune system (identified by inventors as involved in the immunogenic tumor cell death and herein considered as an immunogenic cell death-associated molecules).

Such a protein may be selected for example from AMBRA1 (Activating Molecule in Beclin-1-Regulated Autophagy), AMPK (5′ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase), ATG1, ATG5, ATG7, ATG10, ATG12, ATG14L (BARKOR), BCLN1 (Beclin 1), BIF1, CaMKK¾ (calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase), DAPK (death-associated protein kinase), DDIT3 (DNA damage inducible transcript 3) (CHOP, GADD153), DRAM (damage-regulated autophagy modulator), FIP200 (RB1CC1), FoxO3 (forkhead box 0 transcription factor), GATE-16 (Golgi-associated ATPase enhancer of 16 kDa), HDAC6 (histone deacetylase 6), HSPA5 (BiP (Binding immunoglobulin protein), GFP78, GP96), XBP1 (X-box binding protein 1), DNAJC3 (DnaJ homolog subfamily C member 3) (p58IPK), DNAJB9, DNAJB11, DNAJC10 (DNA sequence corresponding to SEQ ID NO: 527), EDEM1 (ER degradation-enhancing alpha-mannosidase-like 1), EDEM2, EDEM3, FIP200, GABARAP (gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-associated protein), LAMP-2 (lysosome-associated membrane protein type 2), LC3 (microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3) and its isoforms LC3A, LC3B and LC3C, the lipidated form of LC3 (LC3-II), mTOR, SERP1 (Stress-associated endoplasmic reticulum protein 1), SERP2, p62 (sequestosome 1/SQSTM1), PDIA6, PP1R15A (GADD34), Raptor, Rubicon (RUN domain and cysteine-rich domain containing, Beclin 1-interacting) TSC1 (tuberous sclerosis complex 1) and TSC2 (tuberous sclerosis complex 2).

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the presence, in a tumor sample of the subject, of an abnormal expression of a gene selected from CCR1, EIF2AK2, DNAJC10, PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC, and BAX, determines the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response.

The expression is correct if the expressed protein is active or functional, i.e., in the context of the present invention, if the expressed protein is able to directly or indirectly induce a response from the immune system directed against the tumour cell.

In a particular method, the expression abnormality is a downregulation of the expression of CCR1, a downregulation of the expression of EIF2AK2, an upregulation of the expression of DNAJC10, and/or an upregulation of the expression of PDIA3.

In another particular method, the expression abnormality is a downregulation of the expression of CCR1, a downregulation of the expression of EIF2AK2, and an upregulation of the expression of DNAJC10.

In a further particular method, the expression abnormality is a downregulation of the expression of CCR1, a downregulation of the expression of EIF2AK2, and an upregulation of the expression of PDIA3.

Besides the ER stress pathway, the pre-apoptotic autophagy machinery has to be intact for a tumor to respond to chemotherapy. Hence, tumors that present with a loss of nuclear HMGB1 will not respond to adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Moreover, tumors presenting with autophagy-deficiencies (lack of ability to segregate LC3+ autophagosomes) will be chemoresistant. Therefore, tumors that combined both deficiencies (HMGB1 and LC3) will have to be compensated by specific therapies (TLR4/Myd88 agonists and anti-CD39 and/or CD73 Ab respectively or combined therapies).

Methods usable by the man of the art to detect or quantify the previously mentioned proteins are well-known from the skilled man of the art and further identified below in the description.

When the tumour cells do not express or abnormally express the previously mentioned proteins, inventors herein indicates that a “compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer” has to be applied to the subject having a tumor to induce a reaction of the immune system directed against said tumor.

The present disclosure further relates to the abnormal expression of a gene which is specific to tumor cells.

The step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may also consist in detecting the presence of an altered mutated nucleic acid, of an abnormal expression of the nucleic acid, or of an abnormal expression or activity of the protein encoded by the nucleic acid in a biological sample from the tumor's subject (as defined previously), the presence of said altered nucleic acid, abnormal expression of the nucleic acid, or abnormal expression or activity of the protein encoded by said nucleic acid being indicative of the inability for the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, in particular when the subject having the tumor has been previously exposed to a treatment of cancer.

This detection step may indeed be performed before or after the administration to the subject having the tumor of at least part of a treatment of cancer, typically of at least part of a conventional treatment of cancer as previously explained. The detection step is preferably performed after such an administration, for example after one or two cycles of a complete treatment protocol.

The nucleic acid, mentioned in the previously described method, the alteration of which, abnormal expression of which, or the abnormal expression of the corresponding endogenous protein (protein encoded by said nucleic acid), should be detected, may be a gene encoding a protein selected from Eomes (SEQ ID NO: 493), IFNg (SEQ ID NO: 494), Tbx21 (Tbet) (SEQ ID NO: 495), IL-1R1 (SEQ ID NO: 496), FOXP3 (SEQ ID NO: 497), Ltb (SEQ ID NO: 498), LtbR (SEQ ID NO: 499), CXCL12 (SEQ ID NO: 500), CXCL13 (SEQ ID NO: 522), IL-33 (SEQ ID NO: 501), IL1RL1 (ST2) (SEQ ID NO: 502), IL-7r (SEQ ID NO: 503), IL-7 (SEQ ID NO: 504), Cc15 (SEQ ID NO: 505), IL-21 (SEQ ID NO: 506), CXCL10 (IP-10) (SEQ ID NO: 507), CXCL2 (SEQ ID NO: 508), CXCL9 (Mig) (SEQ ID NO: 509), TNF-alpha (TNF-a) (SEQ ID NO: 510), IL-15 (SEQ ID NO: 511), AHR (SEQ ID NO: 1), IL-15ra (SEQ ID NO: 512), IL-1b (SEQ ID NO: 513), CXCL16 (SEQ ID NO: 514), CXCR6 (SEQ ID NO: 523), IL-10 (SEQ ID NO: 515), IL-27 (SEQ ID NO: 516), Cc17 (SEQ ID NO: 517), IL-23r (SEQ ID NO: 518), CX3CL1 (SEQ ID NO: 519), CCL2 (SEQ ID NO: 520), IL-8 (SEQ ID NO: 521), CXCL11 (ITAC) (SEQ ID NO: 524), CXCR1 (SEQ ID NO: 525), CXCR2 (SEQ ID NO: 526), CCR1 (SEQ ID NO: 457), EIF2AK2 (SEQ ID NO: 469), DNAJC10 (SEQ ID NO: 527), PDIA3 (SEQ ID NO: 491), EIF2A (SEQ ID NO: 474), PPP1CB (SEQ ID NO: 471), IKBKB (SEQ ID NO: 481), PPP1CC (SEQ ID NO: 472), and BAX (SEQ ID NO: 487).

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may consist in determining alteration in a gene locus or in the expression of the protein encoded by said gene, in a biological sample of the patient, the presence of such an alteration being indicative of the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response.

In a particular embodiment, a method of determining the ability of a tumor to induce an anticancer immune response may comprise the following steps of (a) obtaining from the subject a test sample of tumoral DNA, cDNA or RNA, (b) contacting the test sample with at least one nucleic acid probe, wherein said nucleic acid is complementary to and specifically hybridises with a targeted altered nucleic acid sequence (one of the previously identified sequence) preferably comprising at least one point mutation, in particular a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), to form a hybridization sample, (c) maintaining the hybridization sample under conditions sufficient for the specific hybridization of the targeted nucleic acid sequence with the nucleic acid probe to occur, and (d) detecting whether there is specific hybridization of the altered targeted nucleic acid sequence with the nucleic acid probe.

Particular techniques the aim of which is to determine the abnormal (in particular low or absent) expression of a particular nucleic acid such as those described previously, or the abnormal expression of the corresponding endogenous protein (protein encoded by said nucleic acid) are detailed later in the description.

In a particular embodiment, if the tumor of a subject is not able to induce an anticancer immune response, the subject will be identified as resistant to conventional treatments of cancer.

Inventors herein demonstrate that a “compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer” as disclosed in the present description should be administered, preferably in addition to a conventional treatment of cancer, to such resistant subjects having a tumor which is not able to induce an efficient anticancer immune response, in order to allow such a response.

Immunogenic Cell Death-Associated Products Found in the Subject

Inventors herein demonstrate that the immunogenic cell death is also dependent from products, herein identified as “immunogenic cell death-associated products or signals”, specific to the mammal, in particular to the human, i.e., independent from the presence of a tumor in the mammal subject, and independent from any treatment a mammal subject having a tumor may have been exposed to.

The step of determining the ability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response may consist in detecting, using one of the previously identified methods (well known by the man skilled in the art), the presence of a mutated nucleic acid, of an abnormal expression of the nucleic acid, or of an abnormal expression or activity of the protein encoded by the nucleic acid in a biological sample (as defined previously) from the subject, the presence of said mutated nucleic acid, abnormal expression of the nucleic acid, or abnormal expression or activity of the protein encoded by said nucleic acid, being indicative of the inability for the subject to induce an anticancer immune response.

In a particular embodiment, if the subject is not able to induce an anticancer immune response, the subject will be identified as resistant or non-responder to conventional treatments of cancer as defined previously.

In a particular embodiment, a method of determining the ability of a subject to induce an anticancer immune response may comprise the following steps of (a) obtaining from the subject a test sample of DNA, preferably of genomic DNA, (b) contacting the test sample with at least one nucleic acid probe, wherein said nucleic acid is complementary to and specifically hybridises with a targeted mutated nucleic acid sequence (one of the below identified sequences) comprising a point mutation, preferably a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), to form a hybridization sample, (c) maintaining the hybridization sample under conditions sufficient for the specific hybridization of the targeted nucleic acid sequence with the nucleic acid probe to occur, and (d) detecting whether there is specific hybridization of the mutated targeted nucleic acid sequence with the nucleic acid probe.

If the subject has a tumor, the previously described detection step may be performed before and/or after any conventional treatment of cancer.

In a preferred embodiment, the step of determining the ability of a subject to induce an anticancer immune response may consist in detecting an abnormal nucleic acid sequence in a biological sample from the subject, the detection of such an abnormal nucleic acid sequence determining the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response.

The method may in particular consist in verifying the presence, in the genome of the subject, of a mutated nucleic acid sequence leading to the abnormal expression of a gene involved in the “anti-cancer immune response”, the presence of such a mutated nucleic acid sequence determining the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response. These genes are herein identified under the term “immune genes”.

The nucleic acid, mentioned in the previously described methods, is typically located in an immune gene as defined previously and identified below.

In the context of the present invention, immune genes may be selected from anyone of the genes identified below in Table 1. Table 1 further identifies, for each immune gene, SNP(s) associated to a non-responder status of the subject (in other words, to the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response).

In the below table the expression “A/G” for example, means that a guanine has been substituted to an adenosine.

TABLE 1 Alteration/SNP Sequence Gene reference Polymorphism reference Coding status NLRP4 rs12462372 A/G SEQ ID NO: 141 NONSYN DDX58 rs12006123 A/G SEQ ID NO: 136 3UTR CX3CR1 rs3732379 C/T SEQ ID NO: 313 NONSYN MTHFR rs1801131 A/C SEQ ID NO: 192 NONSYN FAT2 rs2053028 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 216 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs1041973 A/C SEQ ID NO: 82 NONSYN HLA-DMB rs1042337 C/T SEQ ID NO: 83 SYNON LENG9 rs10423424 C/G SEQ ID NO: 84 NONSYN TP53 rs1042522 C/G SEQ ID NO: 85 NONSYN UGT1A8 rs1042597 C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 86 NONSYN NLRP2 rs1043673 A/C SEQ ID NO: 87 NONSYN TAPBPL rs1045546 A/G SEQ ID NO: 88 NONSYN BAT2 rs1046080 A/C SEQ ID NO: 89 NONSYN MAGEA4 rs1047246 C/G SEQ ID NO: 90 5UTR CABYR rs1049683 A/C SEQ ID NO: 91 NONSYN PHC1 rs1049925 C/T SEQ ID NO: 92 NONSYN ZNF615 rs10500311 A/G SEQ ID NO: 93 NONSYN Klkbl4 rs1052276 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 94 NONSYN SH3RF2 rs1056149 C/G SEQ ID NO: 95 NONSYN ZNF83 rs1056185 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 96 NONSYN LRRC23 rs1057077 A/T SEQ ID NO: 97 NONSYN ATF6 rs1058405 A/G/T SEQ ID NO: 98 NONSYN IRF7 rs1061501 A/G SEQ ID NO: 99 SYNON TNFRSF1B rs1061622 G/T SEQ ID NO: 100 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs1062465 A/T SEQ ID NO: 101 NONSYN ITGAL rs1064524 C/T SEQ ID NO: 102 NONSYN BRDT rs10747493 C/T SEQ ID NO: 103 NONSYN ECE1 rs1076669 C/T SEQ ID NO: 104 NONSYN DDX58 rs10813831 A/G SEQ ID NO: 105 NONSYN ARMC3 rs10828395 A/G SEQ ID NO: 106 NONSYN PZP rs10842971 A/T SEQ ID NO: 107 NONSYN ZNF818 rs10853858 A/G SEQ ID NO: 108 NONSYN TIGD6 rs10875553 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 109 NONSYN CTSS rs2230061 C/T SEQ ID NO: 110 NONSYN IFIH1 rs10930046 C/T SEQ ID NO: 111 NONSYN LARS rs10988 C/T SEQ ID NO: 112 NONSYN FAT2 rs1105168 A/G SEQ ID NO: 113 NONSYN CEP290 rs11104738 C/T SEQ ID NO: 114 NONSYN FBXO7 rs11107 C/T SEQ ID NO: 115 NONSYN GNLY rs11127 C/T SEQ ID NO: 116 NONSYN CCDC110 rs11132306 A/G SEQ ID NO: 117 NONSYN IL23R rs11209026 A/G SEQ ID NO: 118 NONSYN HSPB9 rs1122326 A/C SEQ ID NO: 119 NONSYN CD86 rs1129055 A/G SEQ ID NO: 120 NONSYN GAK rs1134921 A/G SEQ ID NO: 121 NONSYN SP110 rs1135791 C/T SEQ ID NO: 122 NONSYN LEPR rs1137101 A/G SEQ ID NO: 123 NONSYN GSTP1 rs1138272 C/T SEQ ID NO: 124 NONSYN IRAK3 rs1152888 A/G SEQ ID NO: 125 NONSYN BRDT rs1156281 A/C SEQ ID NO: 126 NONSYN EGF rs11568943 A/G SEQ ID NO: 127 NONSYN EGF rs11569017 A/T SEQ ID NO: 128 NONSYN MAEL rs11578336 G/T SEQ ID NO: 129 NONSYN FAM196A rs11594560 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 130 NONSYN ERCC1 rs11615 C/T SEQ ID NO: 131 SYNON SIGLEC12 rs11668530 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 132 NONSYN FCRLA rs11746 A/G SEQ ID NO: 133 NONSYN NUF2 rs11802875 C/T SEQ ID NO: 134 NONSYN CASC5 rs11858113 C/T SEQ ID NO: 135 NONSYN TNXB rs1009382 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 78 NONSYN PLAC8L1 rs12187913 A/T SEQ ID NO: 137 NONSYN ZNF816A rs12459008 A/T SEQ ID NO: 138 NONSYN ZNF665 rs12460170 A/G SEQ ID NO: 139 NONSYN NLRP11 rs12461110 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 140 NONSYN SLCO6A1 rs10055840 C/G SEQ ID NO: 77 NONSYN UGT1A5 rs12475068 C/G SEQ ID NO: 142 NONSYN IFIH1 rs12479043 C/G SEQ ID NO: 143 SYNON C5orf20 rs12520809 C/T SEQ ID NO: 144 NONSYN DDX58 rs12555727 A/G SEQ ID NO: 145 3UTR MPHOSPH1 rs12572012 A/T SEQ ID NO: 146 NONSYN C6orf15 rs1265053 C/G SEQ ID NO: 147 NONSYN LY75 rs12692566 A/C SEQ ID NO: 148 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs12712142 A/C SEQ ID NO: 149 3UTR GDF3 rs12819884 C/T SEQ ID NO: 150 NONSYN CCHCR1 rs130076 C/T SEQ ID NO: 151 NONSYN CCDC36 rs13068038 A/C SEQ ID NO: 152 NONSYN SLCO6A1 rs13190449 A/G SEQ ID NO: 153 NONSYN RNF216 rs13236790 C/T SEQ ID NO: 154 NONSYN TNFRSF10B rs13265018 A/C/G SEQ ID NO: 155 NONSYN ZNF480 rs13343641 C/T SEQ ID NO: 156 NONSYN HORMAD1 rs1336900 A/G SEQ ID NO: 157 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs13431828 C/T SEQ ID NO: 158 5UTR LY75 rs1397706 A/G SEQ ID NO: 159 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs1420101 A/G SEQ ID NO: 160 intron RELL2 rs14251 A/C SEQ ID NO: 161 NONSYN FAT2 rs1432862 A/G SEQ ID NO: 162 NONSYN IL7R rs1494555 C/T SEQ ID NO: 163 NONSYN IL7R rs1494558 A/G SEQ ID NO: 164 NONSYN A2ML1 rs1558526 A/G SEQ ID NO: 165 NONSYN GP6 rs1613662 A/G SEQ ID NO: 166 NONSYN C6orf205 rs1634730 C/T SEQ ID NO: 167 NONSYN PCDH12 rs164075 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 168 NONSYN PCDH12 rs164515 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 169 NONSYN GP6 rs1654416 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 170 NONSYN SP100 rs12724 A/G SEQ ID NO: 171 NONSYN CD180 rs16875312 C/G SEQ ID NO: 172 NONSYN NME1-NME2 rs16949649 C/T SEQ ID NO: 173 flanking_5UTR GSTP1 rs1695 A/G SEQ ID NO: 174 NONSYN CASC5 rs16970911 A/G SEQ ID NO: 175 NONSYN ZNF615 rs16983353 C/T SEQ ID NO: 176 NONSYN FCAR rs16986050 A/G SEQ ID NO: 177 NONSYN PTPRH rs16986309 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 178 NONSYN TMCO6 rs17208187 C/G SEQ ID NO: 179 NONSYN SP100 rs17275036 A/G SEQ ID NO: 180 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs17484219 G/T SEQ ID NO: 181 NONSYN P2RX7 rs17525809 C/T SEQ ID NO: 182 NONSYN MMP9 rs17576 A/G SEQ ID NO: 183 NONSYN PSMB9 rs17587 A/G SEQ ID NO: 184 NONSYN CASC5 rs17747633 A/G SEQ ID NO: 185 NONSYN SPINK5 rs17775319 A/G SEQ ID NO: 186 NONSYN LY75 rs17827158 C/T SEQ ID NO: 187 NONSYN UGT1A8 rs17863762 A/G SEQ ID NO: 188 NONSYN TLR7 rs179008 A/C/T SEQ ID NO: 189 NONSYN ICAM1 rs1799969 A/G SEQ ID NO: 190 NONSYN IL6 rs1800795 C/G SEQ ID NO: 191 flanking_5UTR C5orf20 rs1031844 G/T SEQ ID NO: 80 NONSYN ESR1 rs1801132 C/G SEQ ID NO: 193 SYNON MTHFR rs1801133 C/T SEQ ID NO: 194 NONSYN ERBB2 rs1136201 A/G SEQ ID NO: 195 NONSYN IL4R rs1801275 A/G SEQ ID NO: 196 NONSYN CD180 rs1803440 C/G SEQ ID NO: 197 3UTR IL4R rs1805011 A/C SEQ ID NO: 198 NONSYN IL4R rs1805015 C/T SEQ ID NO: 199 NONSYN IL4R rs1805016 G/T SEQ ID NO: 200 NONSYN TNXB rs185819 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 201 NONSYN A2ML1 rs1860967 C/T SEQ ID NO: 202 NONSYN MFGE8 rs1878326 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 203 NONSYN IL23R rs1884444 G/T SEQ ID NO: 204 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs1886996 C/T SEQ ID NO: 205 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs1886997 A/G SEQ ID NO: 206 NONSYN ICOS rs1978595 C/T SEQ ID NO: 207 flanking_5UTR ZNF615 rs1978717 C/T SEQ ID NO: 208 NONSYN ZNF761 rs1984432 A/G SEQ ID NO: 209 NONSYN KLK2 rs198977 C/T SEQ ID NO: 210 NONSYN IFIH1 rs1990760 C/T SEQ ID NO: 211 NONSYN MAGEA1 rs2008160 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 212 NONSYN CLEC4A rs2024301 A/T SEQ ID NO: 213 NONSYN DPPA3 rs2024320 C/G SEQ ID NO: 214 NONSYN TAPBPL rs2041385 C/T SEQ ID NO: 215 NONSYN C6orf10 rs1033500 C/T SEQ ID NO: 81 NONSYN IL13 rs20541 C/T SEQ ID NO: 217 NONSYN IL4R rs2057768 A/G SEQ ID NO: 218 flanking_5UTR FPR1 rs2070745 C/G SEQ ID NO: 219 NONSYN IL4 rs2070874 C/T SEQ ID NO: 220 5UTR BIRC5 rs2071214 A/G SEQ ID NO: 221 NONSYN MAGEB3 rs2071309 C/T SEQ ID NO: 222 NONSYN TAPBP rs2071888 C/G SEQ ID NO: 223 NONSYN AKAP3 rs2072355 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 224 NONSYN ZBP1 rs2073145 A/G SEQ ID NO: 225 NONSYN DHX58 rs2074158 A/G SEQ ID NO: 226 NONSYN DHX58 rs2074160 A/G SEQ ID NO: 227 NONSYN VARS2 rs2074506 A/C SEQ ID NO: 228 NONSYN KLK9 rs2075802 A/C SEQ ID NO: 229 SYNON SIGLEC9 rs2075803 A/G SEQ ID NO: 230 NONSYN CEBPZ rs2098386 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 231 NONSYN ZNF347 rs2195310 A/G SEQ ID NO: 232 NONSYN IL15RA rs2228059 A/C SEQ ID NO: 233 NONSYN DCC rs2229080 C/G SEQ ID NO: 234 NONSYN LTA rs2229094 C/T SEQ ID NO: 235 NONSYN DOCK1 rs2229603 A/G SEQ ID NO: 236 NONSYN ICAM3 rs2230399 C/G SEQ ID NO: 237 NONSYN TNFAIP3 rs2230926 G/T SEQ ID NO: 238 NONSYN GZMB rs2236338 A/G SEQ ID NO: 239 NONSYN NCR2 rs2236369 C/T SEQ ID NO: 240 NONSYN EGF rs2237051 A/G SEQ ID NO: 241 NONSYN DPCR1 rs2240804 C/T SEQ ID NO: 242 NONSYN LILRA4 rs2241384 C/T SEQ ID NO: 243 NONSYN Klkbl4 rs2241414 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 244 NONSYN ATG16L1 rs2241880 C/T SEQ ID NO: 245 NONSYN SLC44A4 rs2242665 A/G SEQ ID NO: 246 NONSYN MGC23985 rs2250145 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 247 NONSYN MMP9 rs2250889 C/G SEQ ID NO: 248 NONSYN IFNAR1 rs2257167 C/G SEQ ID NO: 249 NONSYN CYP3A7 rs2257401 C/G SEQ ID NO: 250 NONSYN SIGLEC9 rs2258983 A/C SEQ ID NO: 251 NONSYN THG1L rs2270812 A/G SEQ ID NO: 252 NONSYN NCR2 rs2273962 A/G SEQ ID NO: 253 NONSYN LEMD1 rs2274702 G/T SEQ ID NO: 254 intron MMP9 rs17577 A/G SEQ ID NO: 255 NONSYN FCRLA rs2275603 A/G SEQ ID NO: 256 NONSYN PZP rs2277413 C/T SEQ ID NO: 257 NONSYN CCDC33 rs2277603 A/G/T SEQ ID NO: 258 NONSYN ZNF350 rs2278420 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 259 NONSYN WDR55 rs2286394 A/G SEQ ID NO: 260 NONSYN PTPRH rs2288419 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 261 NONSYN PTPRH rs2288515 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 262 NONSYN PTPRH rs2288523 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 263 NONSYN MORC1 rs2290057 C/T SEQ ID NO: 264 NONSYN RBP5 rs2290237 A/T SEQ ID NO: 265 NONSYN NOS2A rs2297518 A/G SEQ ID NO: 266 NONSYN CDX1 rs2302275 C/G SEQ ID NO: 267 NONSYN SPINK5 rs2303063 A/G SEQ ID NO: 268 NONSYN THEG rs2303810 A/C SEQ ID NO: 269 NONSYN FAT2 rs2304024 C/T SEQ ID NO: 270 NONSYN FAT2 rs2304053 A/G SEQ ID NO: 271 NONSYN GP6 rs2304167 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 272 NONSYN ORC4L rs2307394 A/G SEQ ID NO: 273 NONSYN C19orf51 rs2365725 C/T SEQ ID NO: 274 NONSYN CASC5 rs2412541 G/T SEQ ID NO: 275 NONSYN CHRNA2 rs2472553 C/T SEQ ID NO: 276 NONSYN PTPN22 rs2476601 C/T SEQ ID NO: 277 NONSYN CCDC69 rs248427 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 278 NONSYN OLFML2B rs2499836 C/T SEQ ID NO: 279 NONSYN PCDHA9 rs251354 C/G SEQ ID NO: 280 NONSYN TRIM31 rs2523989 A/G SEQ ID NO: 281 NONSYN LILRB3 rs255772 C/G SEQ ID NO: 282 intron P2RX4 rs25644 A/G SEQ ID NO: 283 NONSYN CD14 rs2569190 A/G SEQ ID NO: 284 5UTR KLK14 rs2569491 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 285 NONSYN MORC1 rs2593943 A/G SEQ ID NO: 286 NONSYN CXCL12 rs266088 C/T SEQ ID NO: 287 intron NCR3 rs2736191 C/G SEQ ID NO: 288 flanking_5UTR CAGE1 rs2876098 G/T SEQ ID NO: 289 NONSYN PCDHB12 rs2910006 C/T SEQ ID NO: 290 NONSYN PCDHB7 rs2910313 C/G SEQ ID NO: 291 NONSYN KIR2DS4 rs1130476 G/T SEQ ID NO: 292 NONSYN SLU7 rs2961944 A/G SEQ ID NO: 293 NONSYN CTLA4 rs3087243 A/G SEQ ID NO: 294 flanking_3UTR C6orf10 rs3129941 A/G SEQ ID NO: 295 NONSYN C6orf47 rs3130617 C/T SEQ ID NO: 296 NONSYN CDSN rs3130981 C/T SEQ ID NO: 297 NONSYN CDSN rs3130984 C/T SEQ ID NO: 298 NONSYN LECT2 rs31517 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 299 NONSYN ETFB s1130426 C/T SEQ ID NO: 300 NONSYN SELL rs1131498 C/T SEQ ID NO: 301 NONSYN IL7R rs3194051 A/G SEQ ID NO: 302 NONSYN SIGIRR rs3210908 A/G SEQ ID NO: 303 NONSYN ERCC1 rs3212961 A/C SEQ ID NO: 304 intron PZP rs3213831 C/T SEQ ID NO: 305 NONSYN TEX15 rs323344 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 306 NONSYN TEX15 rs323345 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 307 NONSYN TEX15 rs323346 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 308 NONSYN TEX15 rs323347 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 309 NONSYN ZNF528 rs324125 A/G SEQ ID NO: 310 flanking_5UTR KIAA0141 rs351260 C/T SEQ ID NO: 311 NONSYN ZNF701 rs366793 C/T SEQ ID NO: 312 NONSYN P2RX7 rs10160951 C/G SEQ ID NO: 79 NONSYN CD180 rs3733910 A/G SEQ ID NO: 314 SYNON FAT2 rs3734055 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 315 NONSYN SYCE1 rs3737031 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 316 NONSYN C1RL rs3742089 A/G SEQ ID NO: 317 NONSYN KIR3DL2 rs3745902 C/T SEQ ID NO: 318 NONSYN IFIH1 rs3747517 A/G SEQ ID NO: 319 NONSYN SYCE1 rs3747881 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 320 NONSYN SLC25A2 rs3749780 A/G/T SEQ ID NO: 321 NONSYN C6orf10 rs3749966 C/T SEQ ID NO: 322 NONSYN P2RX7 rs3751142 A/C SEQ ID NO: 323 SYNON P2RX7 rs3751143 G/T SEQ ID NO: 324 NONSYN UGT1A5 rs3755321 A/G SEQ ID NO: 325 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs1129777 C/G SEQ ID NO: 326 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs3758388 A/T SEQ ID NO: 327 NONSYN MPHOSPH1 rs3758390 A/G SEQ ID NO: 328 NONSYN CYP2C19 rs3758581 A/G SEQ ID NO: 329 NONSYN NME1-NME2 rs3760468 A/T SEQ ID NO: 330 flanking_5UTR NME1-NME2 rs3760469 G/T SEQ ID NO: 331 flanking_5UTR MORC1 rs3762697 A/G SEQ ID NO: 332 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs3771175 A/T SEQ ID NO: 333 3UTR TLR3 rs3775291 A/G SEQ ID NO: 334 NONSYN PCDHB6 rs3776096 C/T SEQ ID NO: 335 NONSYN SPINK5 rs3777134 C/T SEQ ID NO: 336 NONSYN PBK rs3779620 A/G SEQ ID NO: 337 NONSYN TDRD6 rs3799277 C/T SEQ ID NO: 338 NONSYN TIRAP rs3802813 A/G SEQ ID NO: 339 NONSYN TIRAP rs3802814 A/G SEQ ID NO: 340 SYNON FATE1 rs3810715 A/G SEQ ID NO: 341 NONSYN Klkb14 rs3815803 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 342 NONSYN ATP10A rs3816800 C/G SEQ ID NO: 343 NONSYN SIGLEC12 rs3829658 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 344 NONSYN IRAK2 rs3844283 C/G SEQ ID NO: 345 NONSYN UGT1A5 rs3892170 C/G SEQ ID NO: 346 NONSYN IL1R1 rs3917320 A/C SEQ ID NO: 347 SYNON GALC rs398607 A/G SEQ ID NO: 348 NONSYN FBXL21 rs40986 A/G SEQ ID NO: 349 NONSYN NOTCH4 rs422951 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 350 NONSYN IRAK4 rs4251545 A/G SEQ ID NO: 351 NONSYN CLEC4D rs4304840 A/G SEQ ID NO: 352 NONSYN SKIV2L rs437179 G/T SEQ ID NO: 353 NONSYN NLRP4 rs441827 C/T SEQ ID NO: 354 NONSYN CTLA4 rs4553808 A/G SEQ ID NO: 355 flanking_5UTR SSX9 rs4598385 A/G SEQ ID NO: 356 NONSYN FLJ41603 rs4629585 A/C SEQ ID NO: 357 NONSYN VARS2 rs4678 C/T SEQ ID NO: 358 NONSYN EGF rs4698803 A/T SEQ ID NO: 359 NONSYN PCYOX1L rs4705336 C/G SEQ ID NO: 360 NONSYN C19orf48 rs4801853 C/T SEQ ID NO: 361 NONSYN ZNF578 rs4802965 A/G SEQ ID NO: 362 NONSYN SAGE1 rs4829799 C/T SEQ ID NO: 363 NONSYN TNFRSF10A rs20575 C/G SEQ ID NO: 364 NONSYN CD14 rs4914 C/G SEQ ID NO: 365 SYNON AHSG rs4918 C/G SEQ ID NO: 366 NONSYN LOC283755 rs4931826 A/C SEQ ID NO: 367 NONSYN SERPINA3 rs4934 A/G SEQ ID NO: 368 NONSYN CCDC71 rs4955418 A/G SEQ ID NO: 369 NONSYN CCDC71 rs4955419 A/T SEQ ID NO: 370 NONSYN TLR4 rs4986790 A/G SEQ ID NO: 371 NONSYN TLR4 rs4986791 C/T SEQ ID NO: 372 NONSYN IFNAR2 rs2229207 C/T SEQ ID NO: 373 NONSYN SELL rs2229969 C/T SEQ ID NO: 374 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs4988956 A/G SEQ ID NO: 375 NONSYN IL1RL1 rs4988957 C/T SEQ ID NO: 376 SYNON IL1RL1 rs4988958 C/T SEQ ID NO: 377 SYNON TLR4 rs5030710 C/T SEQ ID NO: 378 SYNON TLR4 rs5030719 G/T SEQ ID NO: 379 NONSYN FPR1 rs5030878 C/T SEQ ID NO: 380 NONSYN TLR4 rs5031050 A/T SEQ ID NO: 381 NONSYN COP1 rs542571 A/T SEQ ID NO: 382 NONSYN ICAM1 rs5498 A/G SEQ ID NO: 383 NONSYN KLK1 rs5516 C/G SEQ ID NO: 384 NONSYN KLK1 rs5517 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 385 NONSYN C6orf10 rs560505 C/T SEQ ID NO: 386 NONSYN TLR7 rs5741881 A/G SEQ ID NO: 387 SYNON CTLA4 rs5742909 C/T SEQ ID NO: 388 flanking_5UTR NOD2 rs5743291 A/G SEQ ID NO: 389 NONSYN TLR9 rs5743846 A/G SEQ ID NO: 390 NONSYN CASP1 rs580253 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 391 SYNON ITGB3 rs5918 C/T SEQ ID NO: 392 NONSYN PASD1 rs5924658 C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 393 NONSYN DDX53 rs5925720 G/T SEQ ID NO: 394 NONSYN CTCFL rs6025606 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 395 NONSYN CCND1 rs9344 A/G SEQ ID NO: 396 SYNON CTCFL rs6070122 C/G SEQ ID NO: 397 NONSYN CTCFL rs6070128 C/G SEQ ID NO: 398 NONSYN TMC4 rs641738 C/T SEQ ID NO: 399 NONSYN SLC44A4 rs644827 C/T SEQ ID NO: 400 NONSYN SIGLEC12 rs6509544 C/G SEQ ID NO: 401 NONSYN TNFRSF10A rs6557634 C/T SEQ ID NO: 402 NONSYN FAT2 rs6650971 C/T SEQ ID NO: 403 NONSYN SPANXN3 rs6654212 C/G SEQ ID NO: 404 NONSYN UGT1A4 rs6755571 A/C SEQ ID NO: 405 NONSYN UGT1A6 rs6759892 G/T SEQ ID NO: 406 NONSYN CCDC110 rs6827370 C/T SEQ ID NO: 407 NONSYN MYD88 rs6853 A/G SEQ ID NO: 408 3UTR SH3TC2 rs6875902 A/C SEQ ID NO: 409 NONSYN SPINK5 rs6892205 A/G SEQ ID NO: 410 NONSYN IL7R rs6897932 C/T SEQ ID NO: 411 NONSYN HCG9 rs6904029 A/G SEQ ID NO: 412 NONSYN RPP21 rs6986 C/G SEQ ID NO: 413 NONSYN IRAK2 rs708035 A/T SEQ ID NO: 414 NONSYN NCAPD2 rs714774 C/G SEQ ID NO: 415 NONSYN CASC5 rs7177192 C/G SEQ ID NO: 416 NONSYN TULP2 rs7260579 C/T SEQ ID NO: 417 NONSYN LIPI rs7278737 G/T SEQ ID NO: 418 NONSYN LILRB4 rs731170 A/G SEQ ID NO: 419 NONSYN CTLA4 rs733618 A/G SEQ ID NO: 420 flanking_5UTR GSTM3 rs7483 A/G SEQ ID NO: 421 NONSYN NLRP3 rs7525979 C/T SEQ ID NO: 422 SYNON TRIM40 rs757259 C/T SEQ ID NO: 423 NONSYN TRIM40 rs757262 A/G SEQ ID NO: 424 NONSYN SH3RF2 rs758037 C/T SEQ ID NO: 425 NONSYN FMR1NB rs764631 C/T SEQ ID NO: 426 NONSYN CCDC110 rs7698680 A/T SEQ ID NO: 427 NONSYN CCDC110 rs7699687 G/T SEQ ID NO: 428 NONSYN TLR4 rs7869402 C/T SEQ ID NO: 429 3UTR TLR4 rs7873784 C/G SEQ ID NO: 430 3UTR P2RX7 rs7958311 A/G SEQ ID NO: 431 NONSYN HSP90AA1 rs8005905 A/T SEQ ID NO: 432 NONSYN ZNF614 rs8104890 C/T SEQ ID NO: 433 NONSYN ZNF160 rs8105668 C/G SEQ ID NO: 434 NONSYN BIRC8 rs8109165 A/G SEQ ID NO: 435 NONSYN TULP2 rs8112811 C/T SEQ ID NO: 436 NONSYN GZMB rs8192917 A/G SEQ ID NO: 437 NONSYN SP100 rs836237 C/T SEQ ID NO: 438 flanking_3UTR TLR7 rs864058 C/T SEQ ID NO: 439 SYNON FPR1 rs867228 A/C SEQ ID NO: 440 NONSYN LAG3 rs870849 C/T SEQ ID NO: 441 NONSYN LOC284297 rs925878 A/G SEQ ID NO: 442 flanking_5UTR C6orf10 rs9268368 C/T SEQ ID NO: 443 NONSYN C6orf10 rs9268384 A/G SEQ ID NO: 444 NONSYN PTPRH rs9304763 C/G SEQ ID NO: 445 SYNON FLJ41603 rs9324624 C/T SEQ ID NO: 446 NONSYN FAT2 rs9324700 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 447 NONSYN ZNF614 rs9636139 A/G SEQ ID NO: 448 NONSYN ZNF468 rs9749312 A/G SEQ ID NO: 449 3UTR SLC36A3 rs978012 A/G SEQ ID NO: 450 NONSYN NCR3 rs986475 C/T SEQ ID NO: 451 3UTR CTAGE1 rs9946136 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 452 NONSYN

Immune genes are preferably selected the NLR family pyrin domain containing 4 (NLRP41 NALP4/PAN2/CT58) gene, DDX58 [DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box polypeptide 58] or RIG1 gene, the chemokine (C—X3-C motif) receptor 1 (CX3CR1/Fractalkine receptor/CMKBLR1/GPR13/V28) gene, MTHFR [methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase] (NADPH) gene, FAT2 gene [human fat homolog proto-cadherin Fat2 (of the fly fat gene which is a tumor suppressor gene controlling cell proliferation) localized in 5q33 region], AHR (BHLHE76) gene, the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member 10a (TNFRSF10A/TRAILR1/CD261) gene, the sialic acid binding Ig-like lectin 5 (SIGLEC51CD170/OBBP2/CD33L2) gene, the CPX chromosome region candidate 1 (CPXCR1/CT77) gene, the IFNG or IFNγ receptor 1 (IFNGR1/CD119) gene, and the myotubularin related protein 15 (MTMR15/KIAA1018).

Table 2 identifies, for each identified immune gene, SNP(s) associated to a non-responder status of the subject (in other words, to the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response).

TABLE 2 Alteration/SNP Gene reference Polymorphism Sequence reference Coding_status NLRP4 rs302453 A/T SEQ ID NO: 60 NONSYN rs17857373 C/G SEQ ID NO: 61 NONSYN rs17857374 A/C/T SEQ ID NO: 62 NONSYN rs34627915 A/G SEQ ID NO: 63 NONSYN rs17854614 A/C SEQ ID NO: 64 NONSYN DDX58 rs17217280 A/T SEQ ID NO: 17 NONSYN rs35253851 A/C SEQ ID NO: 18 NONSYN rs951618 A/G SEQ ID NO: 19 NONSYN rs35527044 G/T SEQ ID NO: 20 NONSYN rs11795404 A/C SEQ ID NO: 21 NONSYN rs10813831 A/G SEQ ID NO: 22 NONSYN rs11899 C/T SEQ ID NO: 23 3UTR rs10363 A/G SEQ ID NO: 24 3UTR rs10970987 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 25 SYN rs35050877 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 26 3UTR rs12236816 A/G SEQ ID NO: 27 3UTR rs12235719 A/T SEQ ID NO: 28 5UTR CX3CR1 rs3732378 A/G SEQ ID NO: 39 NONSYN rs3732380 C/T SEQ ID NO: 40 NONSYN rs41535248 G/T SEQ ID NO: 41 NONSYN rs11715522 A/C SEQ ID NO: 42 flanking_5UTR rs7636125 C/G SEQ ID NO: 43 3UTR rs11710546 A/G SEQ ID NO: 44 3UTR rs17038674 C/T SEQ ID NO: 45 3UTR rs1050592 C/T SEQ ID NO: 46 3UTR rs4986872 C/T SEQ ID NO: 47 SYN rs17038679 A/G SEQ ID NO: 48 SYN MTHFR Rs1801133 C/T SEQ ID NO: 194 NONSYN AHR rs10250822 C/T SEQ ID NO: 3 intron rs11505406 C/T SEQ ID NO: 4 intron rs1476080 A/C SEQ ID NO: 5 intron rs17779352 C/T SEQ ID NO: 6 SYN rs2066853 A/G SEQ ID NO: 7 NONSYN rs2074113 A/C SEQ ID NO: 8 intron rs2158041 A/G SEQ ID NO: 9 intron rs2282885 C/T SEQ ID NO: 10 intron rs34938955 C/T SEQ ID NO: 11 5UTR rs35225673 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 12 intron rs4986826 A/G SEQ ID NO: 13 NONSYN rs713150 C/G SEQ ID NO: 14 intron rs7796976 A/G SEQ ID NO: 15 5UTR rs7811989 A/G SEQ ID NO: 16 intron TNFRSF10A rs2230229 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 29 NONSYN rs17088980 G/T SEQ ID NO: 30 NONSYN rs20576 A/C SEQ ID NO: 31 NONSYN rs20575 C/G SEQ ID NO: 32 NONSYN rs11986840 C/G SEQ ID NO: 33 NONSYN rs20577 C/T SEQ ID NO: 34 NONSYN rs34737614 G/T SEQ ID NO: 35 NONSYN rs34127830 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 36 3UTR rs2230230 C/T SEQ ID NO: 37 SYN rs3808537 C/T SEQ ID NO: 38 5UTR SIGLEC5 rs3829655 C/G SEQ ID NO: 49 NONSYN rs8108074 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 50 NONSYN rs2278831 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 51 NONSYN rs34553740 C/T SEQ ID NO: 52 NONSYN rs1973019 A/G SEQ ID NO: 53 NONSYN rs17740650 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 54 SYN rs8107754 A/C/G/T SEQ ID NO: 55 SYN CPXCR1 rs5984611 A/G SEQ ID NO: 56 NONSYN rs5940915 A/C SEQ ID NO: 57 NONSYN rs41307393 C/G SEQ ID NO: 58 NONSYN rs12556970 C/T SEQ ID NO: 59 3UTR IFNGR1 rs1327475 C/T SEQ ID NO: 65 intron rs1887415 C/T SEQ ID NO: 66 NONSYN rs17175350 A/C SEQ ID NO: 67 NONSYN rs17175322 A/G SEQ ID NO: 68 NONSYN rs11575936 A/G SEQ ID NO: 69 NONSYN rs7769141 A/C SEQ ID NO: 70 3UTR rs17181562 A/G SEQ ID NO: 71 3UTR rs11914 G/T SEQ ID NO: 72 SYN MTMR15 rs4779794 A/G SEQ ID NO: 73 NONSYN rs17846417 A/G SEQ ID NO: 74 NONSYN rs34722914 A/G SEQ ID NO: 75 5UTR rs8023700 A/G SEQ ID NO: 76 3UTR FAT2 rs1432862 C/T SEQ ID NO: 162 Missense rs2053028 T/C SEQ ID NO: 216 Missense rs6650971 G/A SEQ ID NO: 403 Missense

The method is typically performed on the nucleic acid obtained from cells of a biological sample (blood or serum for example) of the subject, for example on the genomic DNA obtained from blood or seric cells, in particular leukocytes, more preferably Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC), which are non-cancerous cells.

The method may also be performed on tumoral cells of the subject whose normal cells (non-cancerous cells) have an altered genotype.

Inventors herein demonstrate that a “compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer”, as disclosed in the present description, should be administered, preferably in addition to a conventional treatment of cancer, to such resistant subjects which are not able to induce an anticancer immune response, in order to allow such a response.

Typically, the alteration in a nucleic acid sequence may be determined at the level of the selected gene (immune gene, specific to the subject, or tumor gene, specific to the tumor), for example AHR DNA, cDNA, RNA or polypeptide. Optionally, the detection is performed by sequencing all or part of the gene locus or by selective hybridization or amplification of all or part of the gene locus. More preferably a gene locus specific amplification is carried out before the alteration identification step. An alteration in the gene locus may be any form of mutation(s), deletion(s), rearrangement(s) and/or insertions in the coding and/or non-coding region of the locus, alone or in various combination(s). Mutations more specifically include point mutations. Deletions may encompass any region of two or more residues in a coding or non-coding portion of the gene locus, such as from two residues up to the entire gene or locus. Typical deletions affect smaller regions, such as domains (introns) or repeated sequences or fragments of less than about 50 consecutive base pairs, although larger deletions may occur as well. Insertions may encompass the addition of one or several residues in a coding or non-coding portion of the gene locus. Insertions may typically comprise an addition of between 1 and 50 base pairs in the gene locus. Rearrangement includes inversion of sequences. The gene locus alteration may result in the creation of stop codons, frameshift mutations, amino acid substitutions, particular RNA splicing or processing, product instability, truncated polypeptide production, etc. The alteration may result in the production of a polypeptide or protein with altered function, stability, targeting or structure. The alteration may also cause a reduction in protein expression or, alternatively, an increase in said production.

In a preferred embodiment, said alteration is a mutation, an insertion or a deletion of one or more bases. In a particular embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the alteration in the gene locus is selected from a point mutation, a deletion and an insertion in the gene or corresponding expression product, more preferably a point mutation and a deletion. The alteration may be determined at the level of the DNA, RNA or polypeptide.

Within the context of this invention, the “gene locus”, for example “the AHR gene locus”, designates all sequences or products in a cell or organism including, regarding AHR for example, the AHR coding sequences, AHR non-coding sequences (e.g., introns), AHR regulatory sequences controlling transcription and/or translation (e.g., promoter, enhancer/silencer regions, terminator, 5′UTR, 3′UTR, etc.), all corresponding expression products, such as AHR RNAs (e.g., mRNAs) and AHR polypeptides (e.g., a pre-protein and a mature protein); as well as surrounding sequences of 20 kb region, preferably 15.3 kb region, upstream the starting codon (flanking the 5′UTR region) of the AHR gene and 20 kb region, preferably 14.1 kb region, downstream the untranslated region (flanking the 3′UTR region). In a particular embodiment most alterations are not in the promoter sequence.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the step of determining the ability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response may consist in determining alteration in a gene locus (in particular an immune gene locus) or in the expression of the protein encoded by said gene, in a biological sample of the patient, the presence of such an alteration being indicative of the inability of the subject to induce an anticancer immune response.

Alteration of a nucleic acid sequence herein described (in relation with the tumor or with the subject) is preferably a mutation, an insertion or a deletion of one or more bases. More preferably said alteration is one or several single nucleotide polymorphism(s) (SNPs).

In a particular embodiment, the altered nucleic acid is a wild-type nucleic acid comprising at least one point mutation, preferably a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), for example a loss-of-function SNP, i.e., a SNP responsible for the absent or abnormal (non-functional) expression of the protein encoded by the nucleic acid. The wild-type nucleic acid may also comprise several single nucleotide polymorphism(s) (SNPs).

Once a first SNP has been identified in a genomic region of interest, more particularly in an immune gene locus, other additional SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with this first SNP can be identified. Indeed, any SNP in linkage disequilibrium with a first SNP associated with non-responder phenotype will be associated with this trait. Therefore, once the association has been demonstrated between a given SNP and non-responder phenotype, the discovery of additional SNPs associated with this trait can be of great interest in order to increase the density of SNPs in this particular region. Identification of additional SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with a given SNP involves: (a) amplifying a fragment from the genomic region comprising or surrounding a first SNP from a plurality of individuals; (b) identifying of second SNP in the genomic region harboring or surrounding said first SNP; (c) conducting a linkage disequilibrium analysis between said first SNP and second SNP; and (d) selecting said second SNP as being in linkage disequilibrium with said first marker. Sub-combinations comprising steps (b) and (c) are also contemplated. These SNPs in linkage disequilibrium can also be used in the methods according to the present invention, and more particularly in the methods to predict treatment response or ability to induce an anticancer immune response according to the present invention.

Mutations in a gene locus which are responsible for non-responder phenotype may be identified by comparing the sequences of the gene locus from patients presenting non-responder phenotype and responder phenotype. Based on the identified association of SNPs of the particular gene, the identified locus can be scanned for mutations. In a preferred embodiment, functional regions such as exons and splice sites, promoters and other regulatory regions of the gene locus are scanned for mutations. Preferably, patients presenting non-responder phenotype carry the mutation shown to be associated with non-responder phenotype and responder phenotype do not carry the mutation or mutated allele associated with reduced cancer treatment response. However, in case of certain SNPs (such as those present in NLRP4), the SNPs protect the host against relapse, i.e., is a protective SNP. The method used to detect such mutations generally comprises the following steps: amplification of a region of the gene locus of interest comprising a SNP or a group of SNPs associated with non responder phenotype from DNA samples of the gene locus from patients presenting non responder phenotype and responder phenotype; sequencing of the amplified region; comparison of DNA sequences of the corresponding genes from patients presenting non responder phenotype and responder phenotype; determination of mutations specific to patients presenting non responder phenotype.

In the AHR gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs10250822 (SEQ ID NO: 3), rs11505406 (SEQ ID NO: 4), rs1476080 (SEQ ID NO: 5), rs17779352 (SEQ ID NO: 6), rs2066853 (SEQ ID NO: 7), rs2074113 (SEQ ID NO: 8), rs2158041 (SEQ ID NO: 9), rs2282885 (SEQ ID NO: 10), rs34938955 (SEQ ID NO: 11), rs35225673 (SEQ ID NO: 12), rs4986826 (SEQ ID NO: 13), rs713150 (SEQ ID NO: 14), rs7796976 (SEQ ID NO: 15), and rs7811989 (SEQ ID NO: 16).

A typical SNP in the AHR gene is rs2066853 (SEQ ID NO: 7). Such a SNP AHR A/G (R554K) is indicative of a subject being unable to induce an anticancer immune response. Such a subject is typically non-responder to conventional treatments of cancer.

In the NLRP4 gene, the SNP is preferably rs302453 (SEQ ID NO: 60). Such a SNP NLRP4 A/T (Gln925Leu) is indicative of a subject being able to induce a better anticancer immune response. Such a subject is typically responder to conventional treatments of cancer.

In the DDX58/RIG-1 gene, the SNP is preferably rs17217280 (SEQ ID NO: 17). Such a SNP DDX58/RIG-1 A/T (Asp508Glu) is indicative of the inability of the subject to respond to conventional treatments of cancer. In other words, the presence of a wild-type allele A in a subject is indicative of being able to induce a better anticancer immune response.

In the CX3CR1 gene, the SNP is preferably rs3732378 (SEQ ID NO: 39). Such a SNP CX3CR1 A/G (Thr280Met) is indicative of the inability of the subject to respond to conventional treatments of cancer. In other words, the presence of a wild-type allele A in a subject is indicative of being able to induce a better anticancer immune response.

In the FAT2 gene, the SNPs are preferably rs1432862 (SEQ ID NO: 162), rs2053028 (SEQ ID NO: 216), rs6650971 (SEQ ID NO: 403). Such SNPs FAT2 C/T (Arg574Cys), T/C (Leu3514Ser), G/A (Met3631Ile) are indicative of a subject being able to induce a better anticancer immune response. Such a subject is typically responder to conventional treatments of cancer. In other words, the presence of a mutated allele in a subject is indicative of being able to induce a better anticancer immune response.

In the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase MTHFR gene, the SNP is preferably rs1801133 (SEQ ID NO: 194). Such a SNP MTHFR C/T (A222V) is indicative of a subject being able to induce a better anticancer immune response. Such a subject is typically responder to conventional treatments of cancer. In other words, the presence of a wild-type allele C in a subject is indicative of the inability of the subject to respond to conventional treatments of cancer.

A particular method herein described comprises, in addition to previously described steps, a step of controlling, in a tumor, blood or serum sample of the subject, the presence of a herein described single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP); the detection of at least one of:

i. an abnormal expression of the proteins encoded by (i) a gene encoding CCR1, (ii) a gene encoding EIF2AK2, and (iii) a gene encoding DNAJC10 or PDIA3, and

ii. an alteration in the gene encoding MTHFR, being indicative of a resistance of the subject to a therapeutic treatment of cancer.

Preferably, the alteration is a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) corresponding to rs1801133 (wild type allele C/mutated allele T) (SEQ ID NO: 194).

In the NLRP4 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs302453 (SEQ ID NO: 60), rs17857373 (SEQ ID NO: 61), rs17857374 (SEQ ID NO: 62), rs34627915 (SEQ ID NO: 63) and rs17854614 (SEQ ID NO: 64).

In the DDX58 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs17217280 (SEQ ID NO: 17), rs35253851 (SEQ ID NO: 18), rs951618 (SEQ ID NO: 19), rs35527044 (SEQ ID NO: 20), rs11795404 (SEQ ID NO: 21), rs10813831 (SEQ ID NO: 22), rs11899 (SEQ ID NO: 23), rs10363 (SEQ ID NO: 24), rs10970987 (SEQ ID NO: 25), rs35050877 (SEQ ID NO: 26), rs12236816 (SEQ ID NO: 27), and rs12235719 (SEQ ID NO: 28).

In the CX3CR1 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs3732378 (SEQ ID NO: 39), rs3732380 (SEQ ID NO: 40), rs41535248 (SEQ ID NO: 41), rs11715522 (SEQ ID NO: 42), rs7636125 (SEQ ID NO: 43), rs11710546 (SEQ ID NO: 44), rs17038674 (SEQ ID NO: 45), rs1050592 (SEQ ID NO: 46), rs4986872 (SEQ ID NO: 47), and rs17038679 (SEQ ID NO: 48). In the TNFRSF10A gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs2230229 (SEQ ID NO: 29), rs17088980 (SEQ ID NO: 30), rs20576 (SEQ ID NO: 31), rs20575 (SEQ ID NO: 32), rs11986840 (SEQ ID NO: 33), rs20577 (SEQ ID NO: 34), rs34737614 (SEQ ID NO: 35), rs34127830 (SEQ ID NO: 36), rs2230230 (SEQ ID NO: 37) and rs3808537 (SEQ ID NO: 38). In the SIGLEC5 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs3829655 (SEQ ID NO: 49), rs8108074 (SEQ ID NO: 50), rs2278831 (SEQ ID NO: 51), rs34553740 (SEQ ID NO: 52), rs1973019 (SEQ ID NO: 53), rs17740650 (SEQ ID NO: 54), and rs8107754 (SEQ ID NO: 55). In the CPXCR1 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs5984611 (SEQ ID NO: 56), rs5940915 (SEQ ID NO: 57), rs41307393 (SEQ ID NO: 58), and rs12556970 (SEQ ID NO: 59).

In the IFNGR1 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs1327475 (SEQ ID NO: 65), rs1887415 (SEQ ID NO: 66), rs17175350 (SEQ ID NO: 67), rs17175322 (SEQ ID NO: 68), rs11575936 (SEQ ID NO: 69), rs7769141 (SEQ ID NO: 70), rs17181562 (SEQ ID NO: 71), and rs11914 (SEQ ID NO: 72).

In the MTMR15 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs4779794 (SEQ ID NO: 73), rs17846417 (SEQ ID NO: 74), rs34722914 (SEQ ID NO: 75), and rs8023700 (SEQ ID NO: 76).

In the FAT2 gene, the SNP may be more particularly selected from rs1432862 (SEQ ID NO: 162), rs 2053028 (SEQ ID NO: 216), and rs6650971 (SEQ ID NO: 403).

The presence of an alteration in a nucleic acid may be easily detected by the man skilled in the art using methods of the art such as restriction digestion, sequencing, selective hybridisation (for example with a nucleic acid probe present on a nucleotide array), and/or selective amplification, as further explained below.

Alterations in a gene may also be detected by determining the presence of an altered RNA expression. Altered RNA expression includes the presence of an altered RNA sequence, the presence of an altered RNA splicing or processing, the presence of an altered quantity of RNA, etc. These may be detected by various techniques known in the art, including by sequencing all or part of the RNA or by selective hybridisation or selective amplification of all or part of said RNA, for instance.

The presence of an abnormal expression of a target nucleic acid (which may be a nucleic acid from the subject or from the tumor), such as one of those identified previously, may be detected in particular by real time quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR) using probes designed to hybridize within the target nucleic acid sequence (see O'Driscoll L. et al., 1993 and Yajima T. et al., 1998).

In a further variant, the method comprises detecting the presence of an altered expression of the polypeptide or protein encoded by the gene of interest. Altered polypeptide expression includes the presence of an altered polypeptide sequence, the presence of an altered quantity of polypeptide, the presence of an altered tissue distribution, etc. These may be detected by various techniques known in the art, including by sequencing and/or binding to specific ligands (such as antibodies), for instance.

In a particular embodiment, the detection of an abnormal protein expression may be easily performed, by the man skilled in the art, by measuring the cellular level of mRNA encoding a normal protein, a decreased level compared to a control or standard level being correlated to an abnormal protein expression.

Sequencing can be carried out using techniques well known in the art, using automatic sequencers. The sequencing may be performed on the complete gene locus or, more preferably, on specific domains thereof, typically those known or suspected to carry deleterious mutations or other alterations.

Amplification is based on the formation of specific hybrids between complementary nucleic acid sequences that serve to initiate nucleic acid reproduction. Amplification may be performed according to various techniques known in the art, such as by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), ligase chain reaction (LCR), strand displacement amplification (SDA) and nucleic acid sequence based amplification (NASBA). These techniques can be performed using commercially available reagents and protocols. Preferred techniques use allele-specific PCR or PCR-SSCP. Amplification usually requires the use of specific nucleic acid primers, to initiate the reaction. Nucleic acid primers useful for amplifying sequences from the gene locus of interest are able to specifically hybridize with a portion of the gene locus that flank a target region of said locus, said target region being altered, for example in the case of the immune genes, in non responder patients.

Another particular object of this invention resides in a nucleic acid primer useful for amplifying sequences from the gene or locus of interest including surrounding regions. Such primers are preferably complementary to, and hybridize specifically to nucleic acid sequences in the gene locus. Particular primers are able to specifically hybridize with a portion of the gene locus that flank a target region of said locus, said target region being altered, for example in the case of the immune genes, in non responders. Primers that can be used to amplify target region comprising SNPs may be designed based on their sequence or on the genomic sequence of a particular gene.

The invention also relates to a nucleic acid primer, said primer being complementary to and hybridizing specifically to a portion of a gene locus coding sequence (e.g., gene or RNA) altered in certain non responders subjects. In this regard, particular primers of this invention are specific for altered sequences in a gene locus or RNA. By using such primers, the detection of an amplification product indicates the presence of an alteration in the gene locus. In contrast, the absence of amplification product indicates that the specific alteration is not present in the considered sample.

The invention also concerns the use of a nucleic acid primer or a pair of nucleic acid primers as mentioned above in a method of determining the treatment response of a subject having a tumor or in a method of assessing the response of a subject to a treatment of cancer.

Hybridization detection methods are based on the formation of specific hybrids between complementary nucleic acid sequences that serve to detect nucleic acid sequence alteration(s). A particular detection technique involves the use of a nucleic acid probe specific for wild-type or altered (immune or tumor) gene or corresponding RNA, followed by the detection of the presence of a hybrid. The probe may be in suspension or immobilized on a substrate or support (as in nucleic acid array or chips technologies). The probe is typically labeled to facilitate detection of hybrids.

In this regard, a particular embodiment of this invention comprises contacting the sample from the subject with a nucleic acid probe specific for an altered immune gene locus, and assessing the formation of a hybrid.

In a particularly preferred embodiment, the method comprises contacting simultaneously the sample with a set of probes that are specific, respectively, for wild type gene locus and for various altered forms thereof. In this embodiment, it is possible to detect directly the presence of various forms of alterations in the gene locus in the sample. Also, various samples from various subjects may be treated in parallel.

Within the context of this invention, a probe refers to a polynucleotide sequence which is complementary to and capable of specific hybridization with a (target portion of) gene or RNA, and which is suitable for detecting polynucleotide polymorphisms associated with the gene alleles which predispose to or are associated with a reduced ability of the subject or of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response (“mutated allele”).

Probes are preferably perfectly complementary to the particular gene, RNA, or target portion thereof. Probes typically comprise single-stranded nucleic acids of between 8 to 1000 nucleotides in length, for instance of between 10 and 800, more preferably of between 15 and 700, typically of between 20 and 500. It should be understood that longer probes may be used as well. A preferred probe of this invention is a single stranded nucleic acid molecule of between 8 to 500 nucleotides in length, which can specifically hybridize to a region of a gene locus or RNA that carries an alteration.

The method of the invention employs a nucleic acid probe specific for an altered (e.g., a mutated) gene or RNA, i.e., a nucleic acid probe that specifically hybridizes to said altered gene or RNA and essentially does not hybridize to a gene or RNA lacking said alteration.

Specificity indicates that hybridization to the target sequence generates a specific signal which can be distinguished from the signal generated through non-specific hybridization. Perfectly complementary sequences are preferred to design probes according to this invention. It should be understood, however, that certain mismatch may be tolerated, as long as the specific signal may be distinguished from non-specific hybridization.

The invention also concerns the use of a nucleic acid probe as described above in a method of determining cancer treatment response of a subject or in a method of assessing the response of a subject to a cancer treatment.

As indicated above, alteration in the (immune or tumor) gene locus may also be detected by screening for alteration(s) in polypeptide sequence or expression levels.

In order to detect a protein on the cell surface, or, in order to detect the presence, in a cell, of a protein, immunohistochemistry (for example in a tumor bed), ELISA (for example in a blood or serum sample), immunoblotting (in particular Western blot), proteomics, or antibody-based biosensors directed against the protein of interest, as well as any other method known from the man of the art, can be applied to a tumour specimen as previously defined (see Obeid et al., 2007 which provide examples of such techniques).

Immunofluorescence staining or FACS (Fluorescent Activated Cell Sorting) analyses (flow cytometry analyses) is an example of an appropriate method to detect the translocation of a particular protein from the inside to the surface of a cell, in particular of a tumour cell that has been previously submitted to a treatment of cancer.

Contacting the sample with a ligand specific for a polypeptide encoded by a particular gene and determining the formation of a complex is also described.

Different types of ligands may be used, such as specific antibodies. In a specific embodiment, the sample is contacted with an antibody specific for a polypeptide encoded by a particular gene and the formation of a complex is determined Various methods for detecting such a complex can be used, such as ELISA, radio-immunoassays (RIA) and immuno-enzymatic assays (IEMA).

Within the context of this invention, an antibody designates a polyclonal antibody, a monoclonal antibody, as well as fragments or derivatives thereof having substantially the same antigen specificity. Fragments include Fab, Fab′2, CDR regions, etc. Derivatives include single-chain antibodies, humanized antibodies, poly-functional antibodies, etc. An antibody specific for a polypeptide encoded by a particular gene designates an antibody that selectively binds said polypeptide, i.e., an antibody raised against said polypeptide or an epitope-containing fragment thereof. Although non-specific binding towards other antigens may occur, binding to the target polypeptide occurs with a higher affinity and can be reliably discriminated from non-specific binding.

Immunoblotting can in particular be used to measure the degradation of BAP31, the phosphorylation of eIF2alpha, the presence of a protein selected for example from GCN2 and HRI or the activation of a protein selected for example from caspase 8, reticulon-3, PERK, PKR, Bax and Bak in a cell, in particular a tumor cell, more particularly in a tumor cell which has been previously exposed to a cancer treatment, in particular to a conventional cancer treatment.

It is also disclosed kits to predict treatment response or to predict ability to induce an anticancer immune response comprising products and reagents for detecting in a sample from a subject the presence of an alteration in a gene locus or in the corresponding polypeptide or protein; in the gene or corresponding polypeptide or protein expression; and/or in the gene activity.

Such kits comprise any primer, any pair of primers, any nucleic acid probes (wild-type and mutant) and/or any ligand, preferably antibody, described in the present invention. Such kits can further comprise reagents and/or protocols for performing a hybridization, amplification or antigen-antibody immune reaction.

Particular kits are the following kits:

-   -   A kit to detect the abnormal expression of a gene selected from         CCR1, EIF2Ak2, DNAJC10, PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC, BAX         and combinations thereof, in a tumor sample of the subject, the         kit comprising (i) at least one pair of primers, in particular         two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine pairs of primers         corresponding to the previously mentioned genes, and (ii) at         least one probe, preferably a fluorescent probe, allowing the         quantitative detection of the expression of a gene selected from         CCR1, EIF2Ak2, DNAJC10, PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC,         BAX, preferably at least one fluorescent probe for each of the         selected genes of the previously mentioned list of genes,         and (iii) a leaflet providing the control quantitative         expression values corresponding to at least one of said genes in         a control population.     -   A kit to detect an abnormal expression of a gene selected from         AHR and MTHFR (in particular the presence of a polymorphism         associated with an abnormal expression of such a gene) in a         tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at         least one pair of primers, preferably two pairs of primers         corresponding respectively to the AHR and to the MTHFR gene,         and (ii) at least two differently labelled probes, preferably         two differently labelled fluorescent probes, the first probe         recognizing the wild-type allele and the second probe         recognizing the mutated allele of a gene selected from AHR and         MTHFR, preferably two differently labelled probes for each of         said genes.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a gene selected from FAT2 and MTHFR         (for example a kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism         associated with an abnormal expression of such a gene), in a         tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at         least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two differently         labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the wild-type         allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated allele of a         gene selected from FAT2 and MTHFR.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a gene selected from DDX58 (RIG-1) and         CX3CR1 (for example a kit to detect the presence of a         polymorphism associated with an abnormal expression of such a         gene), in a tumor or blood sample of the subject, the kit         comprising (i) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least         two differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the         wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated         allele of a gene selected from DDX58 and CX3CR1.     -   A kit to detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with         an abnormal expression of a NLRP4 gene (for example a kit to         detect the presence of a polymorphism associated with an         abnormal expression of such a gene), in a tumor or blood sample         of the subject, the kit comprising (i) at least one pair of         primers, and (ii) at least two differently labelled probes, the         first probe recognizing the wild-type allele and the second         probe recognizing the mutated allele of the NLRP4 gene.     -   A kit comprising:     -   a) (i) at least one pair of primers, (ii) at least two distinct         probes, preferably different fluorescent probes, allowing the         quantitative detection of the expression of a gene selected from         CCR1, EIF2Ak2, DNAJC10, PDIA3, EIF2A, PPP1CB, IKBKB, PPP1CC and         BAX and (iii) a leaflet providing the control quantitative         expression values corresponding to at least one of said genes in         a control population; and     -   b) (i) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two         differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the         wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated         allele of a gene selected from NLRP4, FAT2 and MTHFR (for         neoadjuvant therapy) or TLR4, P2RX7, DDX58 (for adjuvant         therapy).     -   A kit comprising:     -   a) several antibodies for immunohistochemistry usage recognizing         the core protein machinery of ER stress and autophagy in tissue         sections (paraffin embedded- or frozen) such as phosphorylated         eif2a, ERp57, calreticulin, HMGB1, LC3 gate 16 GABARAP         (gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-associated protein); and     -   b) at least one pair of primers, and (ii) at least two         differently labelled probes, the first probe recognizing the         wild-type allele and the second probe recognizing the mutated         allele of a gene selected from NLRP4, FAT2 and MTHFR (for         neoadjuvant therapy) or TLR4, P2RX7, DDX58 (for adjuvant         therapy).

The herein described kits may further comprise a micro-array or a 96-wells or 384-wells plate to be used for the herein described methods and read through quantitative PCR or multiplex technology.

Compensatory Immunogenic Treatment of Cancer

Inventors advantageously herein provide a new strategy for treating cancer which consists in administering to the subject in need thereof an additional treatment herein identified as “compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer”. As explained previously, a typical subject is a subject resistant to a treatment of cancer, in particular to a conventional treatment of cancer.

This compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer will allow a reaction from the immune system of the subject having a tumor directed against the tumour cells, or will stimulate such a reaction.

Inventors have in particular discovered that such a compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer is able to allow or improve the efficiency of a conventional therapy as described above, in a subject in need thereof.

The compensatory immunogenic treatment of cancer according to the present invention typically involves the exogenous supply, administration for example, to the subject, of at least one compensatory product (molecule, compound, drug or therapeutic agent, cell), preferably together with a conventional therapeutic agent used in a treatment as described above (in order to obtain a therapeutic effect, preferably a synergistic effect), said conventional treatment being easily selected by the cancerologist, as exemplified previously, according to the nature of the cancer to be prevented or treated.

The function of a compensatory product, in the context of the present invention, is to allow the immune system to generate a cancer immune response in a subject identified, with a method herein described, as resistant to a treatment of cancer. As largely explained previously, such a resistance may be due to the inability of the treatment of cancer the subject has been exposed to, to the inability of the subject and/or to the inability of the tumor, to induce an anticancer immune response.

The compensatory product may be selected from a protein, as previously herein identified, i) allowing or enhancing CRT, ERp57, LysRS (KARS) and/or KDEL receptor exposure at the surface of tumor cells, ii) allowing or enhancing the secretion of ATP, HMGB1 (High-mobility group box 1), LysRS and/or IL-8, iii) stimulating the autophagy machinery, and/or an ER stress response, iv) recruiting and/or activating specific effectors in tumor beds, such as IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells and dendritic cells, v) promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway, vi) triggering the NALP3 (Nacht Domain-, Leucine-Rich Repeat-, and PYD-Containing Protein 3) inflammasome.

The compensatory product may also be selected from (i) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of ATP, HMGB1, LysRS and/or IL-8, and/or the exposure of CRT, ERp57, LysRS and/or KDEL receptor at the surface of a tumour cell, (ii) a product stimulating the autophagy machinery and/or an ER stress response, (iii) a product recruiting and/or activating IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells and/or dendritic cells, (iv) a product promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway, or able to bypass said pathway, (v) a product triggering the P2RX7 (P2X purinoreceptor 7) and/or the NALP3 inflammasome, (vi) a product allowing or enhancing the secretion of IL-1b, (vii) a product capable of stimulating intratumoral Vd2 T lymphocytes, and (viii) a product selected from an anti-allergic drug, a neurotropic drug, an antihypertensive or cardiotropic drug such as a Na⁺K⁺ATPase inhibitor, in particular a cardiac glycoside, a spindle poison drug, an antimicrobial drug, an anti-osteoclastic drug, a diuretic drug, an oestrogen, an apyrase inhibitor, and (ix) any combination thereof.

In the present invention, the term “endogenous” means that a particular protein (for example IL-1b) is produced by the cell as a wild-type protein. The wild-type protein has to be distinguished from the recombinant protein (for example rIL-1b), the recombinant protein whose activity, in particular regarding the immune system, is respectively substantially identical to that of the previously mentioned wild-type protein, but which need a human intervention to be produced by the cell.

In the present invention, the term “homologous variant” is used to designate any protein that comprises deleted or substituted amino acid(s), for example any wild-type or recombinant protein or protein fragment that exhibits the properties of the corresponding wild-type protein, in particular that is able to induce a response from the immune system, for example an immunogenic tumor cell death or apoptosis as previously defined.

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention that allows or enhances the secretion of ATP, HMGB1, LysRS and/or IL-8, and/or the exposure of CRT, ERp57, LysRS and/or KDEL receptor at the surface of a tumour cell, in particular of a dying tumor cell, can be selected from rCRT, rIL-8, inhibitors of PP1/GADD34, chloroquine, TLR7 agonists, antihistaminic drugs such as brompheniramine maleate, bumetanide, cyproheptadine, fenspiride, flunisolide, ketotifene, loratadine and/or cardiotrop drugs such as amlodipine besylate, atenolol, benazepril hydrochloride, nimodipine and/or antimicrobial such as cycloserine, diloxanide furoate, fluconazole, mebendazole, mefloquine and/or neurotrop drugs such as aripiprazole, bromocriptine mesylate, carbamazepine, clozapine, haloperidol, methysergide maleate, mianserin hydrochloride, mirtazapine, olanzapine, paroxetine hydrochloride, perphenazine, pizotyline malate, procyclidine hydrochloride, quetiapine fumarate, rapamycin, risperidone, sertraline hydrochloride, trazodone, ziprasidone and/or spindle poison drugs such as colchicine, doxorubicin, mitoxanthrone hydrochloride, vinblastine sulfate, vincristine sulphate and/or anti-osteoclast drugs such as etidronate disodium, estrogen such as estrone, and/or a Na⁺K⁺ATPase inhibitor, in particular a cardiac glycoside such as digoxin, digitoxin, ouabain, proscillaridin, strophantin, sanguinarin, and/or an apyrase inhibitor, and homologous variant thereof.

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention for stimulating the autophagy machinery may be selected from an apyrase inhibitor such as ecto-nucleoside-triphosphate-diphosphohydrolase (CD39) inhibitor (polyoxometalate 1), 6-N,N-Diethyl-D-beta-gamma-dibromomethylene adenosine triphosphate (ARL 67156), 2′(3)-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)-adenosine triphosphate, an antibody inhibiting the ecto-apyrase activity of CD39 and an antibody inhibiting the ecto-5′-nucleotidase activity; spermidin; resveratrol; rapamycin analogs; and/or an ER stress response may be selected from recombinant calreticulin, digoxin, digitoxin, ouabain, strophantin, proscillaridin, sanguinarine, and from an ER stress response inducer, such as thapsigargin (THAPS).

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention for recruiting and/or activating specific effectors in tumor beds, such as IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells and dendritic cells, may be selected from rIL-1b, rIL-17, rIL-22, a phosphoantigen, a Vδ2 T lymphocytes activator, a leukotrien, a prostaglandin, and a chemokine.

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention for promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway, or able to bypass said pathway, may be selected from dendrophilin, a TLR3 ligand such as such as Poly I:C, poly A:U; a TLR9 ligand such as CpG ODN (CpG oligodeoxynucleotides); HMGB1; and chloroquine.

Typically a product capable of promoting activation of the TLR4/myd88 pathway is selected from dendrophilin and any TLR4/myd88 agonists.

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention for triggering the P2RX7 (P2X purinoceptor 7) and/or the NALP3 inflammasome, may be selected from a TLR7 agonist such as synthetic oligoribonucleotides containing arabinonucleotides, imiquimod and resiquimod; a TLR8 agonist such as polyG10; a recombinant cytokine such as rIL-1b and IL-12; and an inhibitor of apyrases such as ecto-nucleoside-triphosphate-diphosphohydrolase (CD39) inhibitor (polyoxometalate 1), 6-N,N-Diethyl-D-beta-gamma-dibromomethylene adenosine triphosphate (ARL 67156), 2′(3)-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)-adenosine triphosphate, an antibody inhibiting the ecto-apyrase activity of CD39 and an antibody inhibiting the ecto-5′-nucleotidase activity.

A preferred “compensatory product” usable in the present invention that allows or enhances the secretion of IL-1b, in particular by an immune cell (as herein defined), can be selected from recombinant IL-12 (rIL-12) and/or recombinant IL-1b (rIL-1b). Such a recombinant cytokine may advantageously be used in combination with a molecule selected from an anti-PD1 (Programmed Death 1) molecule, a B7-DCFc molecule, an antibody directed against CTLA4 (anti-Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Antigen 4 Ab) or against 4-1BBL (anti-4-1BBL Ab), a metronomic cyclophosphamide and any combination thereof.

The compensatory molecule may also be a molecule capable of stimulating intratumoral Vd2 T lymphocytes such as a molecule selected from a phosphoantigen (such as bromohydrinpyrophosphate or BrHPP, Phosphostim®) and a lipid. Such a compensatory molecule is preferably used in combination with a conventional chemotherapeutic agent in particular in patients who do not correctly express IL-17.

The compensatory molecule may also be a molecule capable of promoting activation of costimulatory receptors (such as agonists CD40 Ab, CD27 Ab, 4-1BB Ab) or a molecule (for example an antibody) capable of blocking inhibitory pathways such as CTLA4, LAG3, Tim-3, PD-1, PDL1, BTLA4.

The compensatory molecule may more particularly be selected from an anti-allergic drug, in particular an anti-histaminic drug or an anti-inflammatory drug; a neurotropic drug, in particular an antidepressant drug, an antipsychotic drug, an antiparkinsonian drug, an anti-headache drug, an analgesic drug, an anticonvulsant drug and an immunosuppressive drug; an antihypertensive or cardiotropic drug such as a Na⁺K⁺ATPase inhibitor; a spindle poison drug such as an antineoplastic drug, an antimitotic drug and an antigout drug; an antimicrobial drug, in particular an anthelmintic drug, an amebicide drug, an antibacterial drug, an antifungal drug and an antimalarial drug; an anti-osteoclastic drug; a diuretic drug; an oestrogen; an apyrase inhibitor; and any combination thereof.

In particular embodiments of the present invention:

-   -   the anti-histaminic drug may be selected from antazoline         phosphate, azelastine hydrochloride, brompheniramine maleate,         cyclizine, cyproheptadine, ketotifene, fenspiride, loratadine         and terfenadine.     -   the anti-inflammatory drug may be flunisolide.     -   the antidepressant drug may be selected from sertraline         hydrochloride, paroxetine hydrochloride, mianserin         hydrochloride, trazodone and mirtazapine.     -   the antipsychotic drug may be selected from ketanserin tartrate,         risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine fumarate, ziprasidone,         clozapine, aripiprazole, haloperidol and perphenazine.     -   the antigout drug may be colchicine.     -   the antiparkinsonian drug may be selected from procyclidine         hydrochloride and bromocriptine mesylate.     -   the anti-headache drug may be selected from methylsergide         maleate and pizotyline malate.     -   the analgesic drug may be carbamazepine.     -   the anticonvulsant drug may be carbamazepine.     -   the immunosuppressive drug may be rapamycin.     -   the antihypertensive or cardiotropic drug may be selected from         atenolol, benazepril hydrochloride, amlodipine besylate and         nimodipine.     -   the antineoplastic drug may be selected from MTX, DX,         vinblastine sulphate and vincristine sulphate.     -   the antimitotic drug may be colchicine.     -   the amebicide drug may be diloxanide furoate.     -   the anthelmintic drug may be mebendazole.     -   the antibacterial drug may be selected from cycloserine     -   the antifungal drug may be fluconazole.     -   the antimalarial drug may be mefloquine.     -   the anti-osteoclastic drug may be etidronate disodium.     -   the diuretic drug may be bumetanide.     -   the oestrogen may be estrone.     -   the Na⁺K⁺ATPase inhibitor may be a cardiac glycoside such as         digoxin, digitoxin, ouabain, proscillaridin, strophantin and         sanguinarin.     -   the apyrase inhibitor may be a         ecto-nucleoside-triphosphate-diphosphohydrolase (CD39) inhibitor         (polyoxometalate 1), 6-N,N-Diethyl-D-beta-gamma-dibromomethylene         adenosine triphosphate (ARL 67156),         2′(3)-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)-adenosine triphosphate, an antibody         inhibiting the ecto-apyrase activity of CD39 and an antibody         inhibiting the ecto-5′-nucleotidase activity.

The compensatory molecule may further be selected from an histamine H1 antagonist such as antazoline phosphate, azelastine hydrochloride, brompheniramine maleate, cyclizine, cyproheptadine, ketotifene, fenspiride, loratadine or terfenadine; a 5HT uptake inhibitor such as sertraline hydrochloride or paroxetine hydrochloride; a Ca channel blocker such as amlodipine besylate or nimodipine; a spindle poison such as colchicine, vinblastine sulphate or vincristine sulfate; a topoisomerase II inhibitor such as MTX or DX; a dopamine antagonist such as haloperidol; a dopamine and serotonin antagonist such as risperidone, olanzapine, or clozapine; a glucose uptake inhibitor such as mebendazole; an inhibitor of alanine racemase such as cycloserine; a norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor such as mianserin hydrochloride; an alpha2-adrenergic receptor antagonist such as mirtazapine; a ergosterol synthesis inhibitor such as fluconazole; a 5HT antagonist such as ketanserin tartrate, pizotyline lalate; a beta adrenergic blocker such as atenolol; a ACE inhibitor such as benazepril hydrochloride; a bone resorption inhibitor such as etidronate disodium; an anticholinergic such as benserazide hydrochloride, biperiden, carbidopa, cyclopentolate hydrochloride, dibucaine hydrochloride, dicyclomine hydrochloride, doxepin hydrochloride, ethopropazine hydrochloride, maprotiline hydrochloride, mepenzolate bromide, nortriptyline, protryptiline hydrochloride, oxybutynin chloride, procyclidine hydrochloride, pyrimethamine, quinidine gluconate, solifenacin, trimipramine maleate; a prolactine inhibitor such as bromocriptine mesylate; a FRAP inhibitor such as rapamycin, a steroid such as flunisolide; an adrenergic agonist such as adrenaline bitartrate, xylometazoline hydrochloride, naphazoline hydrochloride; and any combination thereof.

The compensatory molecule may further be selected from an acetamide, an alkaloid derived from periwinkle, an alkaloid derived from ergot, an anthracycline, a benzimidazole, a benzodiazepine, a butyrophenone, a dibenzoazepine, a dibenzocycloheptene, a dibenzodiazepine, a dihydropyridine, a diphosphonate, a phenylpiperidine, a propanol and a thiazole derivative.

A particular acetamide may be selected from for example acetaminosalol, acetanilide, aminitrozol, bufexamac, citiolone, clofexamide chlorhydrate, clofezone, fenoxedil chlorhydrate, guanfacine chlorhydrate, lidocaine, lidocaine chlorhydrate, mefexamide chlorhydrate, oxetacaine, salicylate de picolamine, thiamphenicol, thiamphenicol amino acetate acetylcysteinate, thiamphenicol aminoacetate chlorhydrate and valpromide.

A particular alkaloid derived from periwinkle may be selected from for example vindesine sulphate and vinorelbine ditartrate.

A particular alkaloid derived from ergot may be selected from for example lisuride maleate acide, methylergometrine maleate, methysergide maleate acide and nicergoline.

A particular anthracycline may be selected from for example aclarubicine chlorhydrate, daunorubicine chlorhydrate, epirubicine chlorhydrate, idarubicine chlorhydrate, pirarubicine and zorubicine chlorhydrate.

A particular benzimidazole may be selected from for example albendazole, astemizole, bendazol, benperidol, candesartan cilexetil, chlormidazole chlorhydrate, clemizole hexachlorophenate, clemizole penicilline, clemizole undecylenate, domperidone, flubendazole, lansoprazole, mibefradil dichlorhydrate, mizolastine, omeprazole, oxatomide, pantoprazole sodique, pimozide, rabeprazole sodique, telmisartan and tiabendazol.

A particular benzodiazepine may be selected from for example alprazolam, bromazepam, brotizolam, chlordiazepoxide, clobazam, clonazepam, clorazepate dipotassique, clotiazepam, cloxazolam, delorazepam, diazepam, estazolam, flunitrazepam, ketazolam, loflazepate d'ethyle, loprazolam mesilate, lorazepam, lormetazepam, medazepam, midazolam chlorhydrate, nitrazepam, nordazepam, oxazepam, pirenzepine dichlorhydrate, prazepam, temazepam, tetrazepam, tofisopam and triazolam.

A particular butyrophenone may be selected from for example benperidol, buflomedil chlorhydrate, droperidol, fluanisone, haloperidol decanoate, moperone chlorhydrate, pipamperone dichlorhydrate, primaperone chlorhydrate and trifluperidol chlorhydrate.

A particular dibenzoazepine may be selected from for example carpipramine dichlorhydrate, clomipramine chlorhydrate, desipramine chlorhydrate, imipramine chlorhydrate, metapramine fumarate, opipramol dichlorhydrate, prozapine chlorhydrate, quinupramine, trimipramine maleate and trimipramine mesilate.

A particular dibenzocycloheptene may be selected from for example amineptine chlorhydrate, amitriptyline, amitriptyline chlorhydrate, cyproheptadine chlorhydrate, demexiptiline chlorhydrate, nortriptyline chlorhydrate, noxiptiline chlorhydrate and protriptyline chlorhydrate.

A particular dibenzodiazepine may be selected from for example clozapine and dibenzepine chlorhydrate.

A particular dihydropyridine may be selected from for example felodipine, isradipine, lacidipine, nicardipine chlorhydrate, nifedipine and nitrendipine.

A particular diphosphonate may be selected from for example alendronate monosodique, clodronate disodique, ibandronate sodique, pamidronate disodique and tiludronate disodique.

A particular phenylpiperidine may be selected from for example remifentanil chlorhydrate and sufentanil.

A particular propanol may be selected from for example acranil, alprenolol chlorhydrate, bufeniode, buphenine chlorhydrate, bupranolol chlorhydrate, chlorobutanol, cimepanol, clofedanol, corbadrine chlorhydrate, cyclopentobarbital ephedrine, dimercaprol, dioxethedrine chlorhydrate, dioxyphedrine chlorhydrate, diphepanol, ephedrine, ephedrine chlorhydrate, ephedrine levulinate, ephedrine sulfate, fenalcomine chlorhydrate, ifenprodil tartrate, inosiplex, isoxsuprine chlorhydrate, metaraminol bitartrate, methoxamine chlorhydrate, metoprolol succinate, metoprolol tartrate, nadolol, ornidazole, oxprenolol chlorhydrate, penbutolol sulfate, phenylpropanolamine chlorhydrate, pindolol, pridinol chlorhydrate, pseudoephedrine chlorhydrate, pseudoephedrine sulfate, racephedrine chlorhydrate, ritodrine chlorhydrate, secnidazole, suloctidil, tertatolol chlorhydrate, trihexyphenidyle chlorhydrate, zipeprol and zipeprol dichlorhydrate.

A particular thiazole derivative may be selected from for example azathioprine, bifonazole, butoconazole nitrate, carbimazole, clotrimazole, dacarbazine, econazole nitrate, eprosartan mesilate, etomidate chlorhydrate, fenticonazole nitrate, histamine dichlorhydrate, imiquimod, isoconazole nitrate, ketoconazole, metronidazole, metronidazole benzoate, miconazole, miconazole nitrate, nimorazole, ondansetron chlorhydrate, ornidazole, oxiconazole nitrate, secnidazole, sertaconazole nitrate, sulconazole nitrate, thiamazole, timidazole and tioconazole.

A further object of the present invention relates to the use of at least one compensatory molecule, from the molecules identified previously, to prepare a pharmaceutical composition that is preferably intended to be administered in combination with a distinct product, typically an agent used in a treatment of cancer, in particular in a conventional treatment of cancer as mentioned previously (for example a non immunogenic treatment), to prevent or treat a cancer as defined above, in a mammal, preferably a human.

In this context, the compensatory molecule can be considered as an adjuvant to the conventional therapeutic drug.

In a particular embodiment, if the patient having a tumor is to be exposed to an immunogenic conventional cancer treatment as previously defined, and if the tumor is identified, using a method as herein described, as not able to induce an anticancer immune response, then a compensatory product should be administered to the subject, preferably together with the first exposition, for example administration, of the immunogenic conventional cancer treatment (for example chemotherapeutic drug, ionizing radiation, etc.).

Such a compensatory product may be selected in particular from a recombinant CRT (rCRT) and a recombinant IL-8 (rIL-8).

In such a situation where the tumor is not able to induce an anticancer immune response, the compensatory product is preferably to be administered in the tumor or in the tumor bed.

In another particular embodiment, (i) if the patient having a tumor is to be exposed to an immunogenic conventional cancer treatment as previously defined, for example a chemotherapy using anthracyclines, (ii) if the tumor, for example a breast tumor, is identified, using a method as herein described, as able to induce an anticancer immune response, and (iii) if the subject is identified, using a method as herein described, as not able to induce an anticancer immune response, because, for example, of the presence of a SNP [as identified previously, in particular rs2066853 (SEQ ID NO: 7)] in her AHR gene, then a compensatory product should be administered to the subject, preferably with a conventional treatment of cancer.

In a preferred embodiment, the conventional treatment of cancer is a chemotherapy and the compensatory product is administered after each cycle of the all chemotherapeutic treatment, preferably two, three, four or five days after the exposition of the subject to a cycle of the chemotherapeutic treatment.

Such a compensatory product may be selected for example from IL-17 producing γδ T cells, phosphantigens such as biphosphonates (zoledronate) and clodronate.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the absence of IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes in the tumor of a subject or the presence of SNP in the genomic DNA of the subject (such as in the AHR or in the NLRP4 gene) for example, is indicative of the absence of an anticancer immune response in the subject who has been exposed to a conventional treatment of cancer, in particular to a chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer, and reveals a resistance of the subject to the treatment of cancer.

A compensatory product should thus be administered to this subject, preferably locally in the tumor, preferably together with the conventional treatment of cancer. Such a compensatory product may be selected from IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes; recombinant IL-22 (rIL-22) and/or IL-17 (rIL-17); phosphoantigenic synthetic ligands of γδ T lymphocytes [preferably together with recombinant IL-1b (rIL-1b) and/or IL-23 (rIL-23)], such as bromohydrin pyrophosphate (BrHPP, active pharmaceutical ingredient in Phosphostim) and V62 T lymphocytes activators such as biphosphonates (zoledronate) and/or clodronate.

The previously mentioned compensatory products are preferably injected locally into the tumor or in a tumor bed.

Also herein provided, is a pharmaceutical composition comprising such a drug or compensatory molecule or a combination of identical or different drugs or compensatory molecules, in association with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient or diluent.

Appropriate excipient, diluant or carrier usable in the all present invention may be selected for example from saline, isotonic, sterile or buffered solutions, etc. They can further comprise stabilizing, sweetening and/or surface-active agents, etc. They can be formulated in the form of ampoules, flasks, tablets, or capsules, by using techniques of galenic known per se.

The pharmaceutical composition mentioned previously may be administered to the subject in need thereof, before, during and/or after any treatment of cancer described previously. It is preferably administered during or after said treatment, for example 24 hours, two days, three days or four days after the treatment.

For example, in a particular embodiment of the present invention, the compensatory products are IL-17 producing γδ T lymphocytes which may be advantageously administered to a subject in need thereof, two days after exposition of said subject to a treatment of cancer using radiotherapy or a chemotherapy wherein, for example, DX is administered to the subject.

Also herein described are compensatory molecules for use in the treatment of cancer, preferably in combination with a conventional treatment of cancer, in particular a chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer, in a subject identified, by a method as herein described, as resistant to a conventional treatment of cancer.

Method to Prevent or Treat a Disease

The present invention also relates to a method for preventing or treating a cancer, as herein defined, comprising the administration to a mammal, in particular a human, in need thereof, of at least one compound selected from the previously described compensatory molecules, preferably together with (in combination with) a distinct therapeutic agent, typically an agent used in a conventional treatment of cancer as defined previously.

A subject in need of a compensatory molecule is subject that has been tested and identified as resistant to a treatment of cancer according to the method described above.

In a particular embodiment of the present invention, the previously described method for treating cancer is performed on a subject having a tumor before surgical resection thereof.

In another particular embodiment of the present invention, the previously described method for treating cancer is performed on a subject having a tumor after surgical resection thereof.

The above method to treat a disease may comprise a step of directly injecting at least one selected compensatory molecule in the tumour, or in the tumor bed, of the subject in need thereof.

Screening Methods

The present invention also provides a method for screening or selecting a compound that is able to modify the activity of the immune system towards a tumor cell, in particular to trigger an immunogenic tumor cell death, the method comprising a step of detecting and/or measuring the level of expression, by a particular tumor cell, of a functional immunogenic cell death-associated molecule as herein described, in the presence of a test compound, wherein a modified expression in comparison with a control cell that has not been exposed to or contacted with the test compound, is indicative of the capacity of said compound to modify the activity of the immune system towards said cell.

The present invention further provides a method for screening a compound usable for treating a cancer, as a compensatory product according to the present invention, in a subject having an altered nucleic acid, an altered nucleic acid expression, or an abnormal expression or activity of the protein corresponding to said nucleic acid, said method comprising determining in vitro, in vivo or ex vivo the ability of a test compound to (i) restore a functional expression of said altered or abnormal protein (ii) modulate (i.e., induce, increase, or decrease) the expression or activity of said protein, or (iii) modulate the expression or activity of a ligand of said protein.

The compounds identified with one of the herein described screening methods may be used, in the context of the present invention, as compensatory molecules.

Other characteristics and advantages of the invention are given in the following experimental section (with reference to FIGS. 1 to 46), which should be regarded as illustrative and not limiting the scope of the present application.

EXPERIMENTAL PART Example 1 IL-1β-Dependent Contribution of IL-17 Producing γδT Cells in the Efficacy of Cytotoxic Anticancer Therapies

By triggering an immunogenic cell death modality, some anticancer compounds including anthracyclines elicit tumor-specific IFN-γ producing CD8⁺ T cells that are mandatory for therapeutic success. This adaptive immune response depends on IL-1β produced by DC confronted with or exposed to anthracycline treated tumor cells. Inventors analyzed the influence of immunogenic chemotherapy on the tumor microenvironment to identify inflammatory components which link innate and cognate immune responses. Inventors herein demonstrate that distinct subsets of γδ T lymphocytes (Vγ4⁺ and Vγ6⁺) colonized tumors, where they proliferate and become potent IL-17 producers upon chemotherapy. In the present experiment, IL-17A production by γδ T cells fully depended on the DC mediated IL-1β production and aryl hydrocarbon receptors also contributed to this process. In Vγ4/6^(−/−) mice or in the absence of a functional IL-17/IL-17 receptor (IL-17R) pathway or upon blockade of AHR, the response to immunogenic cell death or the efficacy of chemotherapy was compromised. Conversely, adoptive transfer of γδ T cells increased the efficacy of anthracycline-based chemotherapy, under the condition that these cells express the IL-1R1. Therefore, IL-17 producing γδT cells or lymphocytes γδT17 cells) represent a novel link between cell death and cognate immunity during anticancer chemotherapy.

While the contribution of IFN-γ to tumor surveillance and anticancer immune responses is clearly established, that of the IL-17A/IL-17R signaling pathway remains controversial (Kryczek et al., 2009; Martin-Orozco et al., 2009; Wang et al., 2009). In tumor models where CD4⁺ T cells are the source of IL-17, this cytokine promotes IL-6-mediated Stat3 activation, acting as a protumorigenic trigger (Kortylewski et al., 2009; Wang et al., 2009). Thus, inventors supposed that IL-17 could be one of the factors that link chronic inflammation to cancer development. However, in adoptive transfer experiments, IL-17-producing CD8⁺ T cells could reduce the volume of large established tumor, presumably by differentiation into long-lasting IFN-γ producers (Hinrichs et al., 2009). Therefore, the source and/or the targets of IL-17 must determine whether this cytokine enhances or reduces tumorigenesis. Interestingly, it appears that the production of IL-17 is strongly dependent on signaling via aromatic AHR, a ligand-activated transcription factor widely expressed in many tissues including lymphoid organs. In particular, Th17 cells and dendritic cells express high levels of AHR. Activation of AhR by yet elusive endogenous ligands markedly increased the proportions of Th17 cells and their production of IL-17 (Veldhoen et al., 2008). However, before the present invention it was unknown whether and how AHR impacts on anticancer immune responses at the level of IL-17 production.

Similarly, the contribution of γδT cells in tumor immunosurveillance is still elusive (Hayday, 2009). In humans, εδ 1 T cells have been shown to either mediate immunosuppressive activities (Peng et al., 2007) or to be associated with a reduced occurrence of cancers in transplanted patients bearing a CMV infection (Dechanet et al., 1999). In contrast, γδ2 T cells can be activated by various synthetic ligands to produce Th1-like cytokines and exhibit cytotoxic functions against tumors (Kabelitz et al., 2007). Although various γδ T cell subsets have been reported to be able to produce IL-17 during microbial infection or autoimmune disorders of mice (O'Brien et al., 2009; Shibata et al., 2007), no data are available on the incidence and functional relevance of IL-17-producing γδ T cells in cancer. γδT17 cells have been reported to share most phenotypic markers with Th17 (expression of CCR6, RORγt, AHR, IL-23R, IL-17A, IL-22) (Martin et al., 2009). They depend upon TGF-β but not IL-23 or IL-6 for their generation and maintenance (Do et al.) and they were unrestricted by Vγ usage (although they were mostly Vγ2Vγ3 in the context of mycobacteria (Martin et al., 2009) and Vγ4 in experimental autoimmune encephalitis (Sutton et al., 2009)). Recent work suggests that thymic selection does little to constrain γδ T cell antigen specificities, but instead determines their effector fate. When triggered through the T cell receptor, ligand-experienced cells make IFN-γ, whereas ligand-naïve γδT cells produce IL-17 (Jensen et al., 2008).

It is herein demonstrated that a therapy-induced immunogenic cancer cell death which stimulates a therapeutic anti-cancer immune response influences the composition and the architecture of the immune infiltrate present in tumors, which in turn contributes to the control of residual tumor cells.

Inventors herein show that, in response to an immunogenic chemotherapy with anthracyclines and OXP, an early infiltration by γδ T17 cells is a prerequisite for optimal colonization of tumor beds by CD8⁺ T lymphocytes, eventually leading to tumor growth retardation or regression. Inventors demonstrate that DC producing IL-1β in response to dying tumor cells and AHR signaling determine and optimize IL-17 release by γδ T cells. Finally, they show that both γδ T cells and the IL-17/IL17 receptor signaling are required for inducing an optimal anticancer response of a subject undergoing a chemotherapy and that the adoptive transfer of γδ T17 cells increases the therapeutic efficacy of an anticancer chemotherapy.

Material and Methods

Mice.

Wild type C57bl/6 (H-2^(b)) and BALB/c (H-2^(d)) mice aged between 7-12 weeks were purchased from Harlan (Gannat, France). Nude mice were bred in the animal facility of IGR. TCR 6^(−/−) (H-2^(b)), IL-1R1^(−/−) (H-2^(b)) and IL-17Rα^(−/−) (H-2^(b)) mice were bred at CDTA, Orléans, France through BR and PP (as for TCR δ^(−/−)). Vγ4γ6^(−/−) mice (H-2^(b)) were kindly provided by GM and KI. IL-23p19^(−/−) (H-2^(b)) were kindly provided by FP. CD1d^(−/−) and CCR6^(−/−) (H-2^(b)) were bred at St Vincent de Paul Hospital AP-HP, Paris, France and provided by KB. The experimental protocols were approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee in the animal facility of Institut Gustave Roussy.

Cell Lines and Reagents.

CT26 (H-2^(d)) colon cancer, MCA205 sarcoma (H-2^(b)), TS/A mammalian cancer (H-2^(d)) and EL-4 thymoma (H-2^(b)) were cultured in RPMI1640 supplemented with 10% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 IU/ml penicillin/streptomycin, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 1 mM non-essential amino acids, and 10 mM HEPES at 37° C., 5% CO₂. All media were purchased from GIBCO, France. AHR antagonist CH223191 was from Calbiochem. Recombinant mouse interleukin-1β (IL-1β, IL-23, IL-6, TGF-β and IL-18 BPd/Fc were from R&D system. DX hydrochloride (D1515) and MTX dihydrochloride (M6545) were from Sigma Aldrich. Mouse IL-17, IL-1β ELISA kits were purchased from eBioscience. Mouse IL-22, IL-23 ELISA kits were purchased from R&D system. Antibodies for CD45.2 (clone 104), CDR (clone 145-2C11), CD4 (clone GK1.5), CD8α (clone 53-6.7), TCR &lone GL-3, CD69 (clone H1.2F3), IL-17A (clone TC11-18H10) or IFN-γ (clone XMG1.2) for surface or intracellular staining were from BD bioscience or eBioscience. Neutralizing antibodies for IL-17 (MAB421), IFN-γ (XMG1.2), CCL20 (MAB760), IL-23 (AF1619), IL-23R (MAB1686) and IL-6 (MAB406) were from R&D system. LIVE/DEAD Fixable Dead Cell Stain Kit, DiOC6(3) and DAPI were purchased from Molecular Probes, Invitrogen. CpG oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) 1668 was from MWG Biotech AG.

Tumor Models and Chemo/Radiotherapy.

0.8 million MCA205 or CT26 or TS/A tumor cells were inoculated subcutaneously near the thigh into C57Bl/6 (H-2^(b)) or BALB/c (H-2^(d)) mice. Anthracyclines-based chemotherapy was performed in MCA205 and CT26 models by intratumoral injecting DX (2 mM, 50 ml) when tumors reached the size 25-40 mm². Radiotherapy was performed by local X-ray irradiation (10 Gy, RT250, Phillips) at the unshielded tumor area when TS/A tumor reached the size 40-60 mm².

Gene Expression Assays.

Tumors from mice either treated with DX or PBS were removed 8 days after treatment. Whole RNA was extracted using RNeasy Mini Kit, QIAGEN from pieces of tumor homogenates. 5 μg of RNA from each sample were reverse-transcribed using Quantitect Reverse Transcription Kit (QIAGEN). Gene expression assays were performed with TaqMan® 96 well Plates customized to test cytokines, chemokines as well as transcription factors using StepOnePlus™ Real-Time PCR System. PPIA was chosen as the endogenous control to perform normalization between different samples.

Tumor Dissection and Flow Cytometry.

Tumor burdens were carefully removed, cut into small pieces with scissors within digesting buffer (400 U/ml Collagenase IV and 150 U/ml DNase I in RPMI1640) and incubated for 30 min at 37° C. Single cell suspension was obtained by grinding the digested tissue and filtering through 70 μM cell strainer. After washing with PBS, cells were resuspended at 2×10⁷/ml, blocked with 10 μg/ml anti-CD16/CD32 (eBioscience) in PBS containing 2% mouse serum for 5 min at 4° C. 2.5 μg/ml of antibodies were used for surface staining at 4° C., 30 min. LIVE/DEAD Fixable Dead Cell Stain Kit was used to distinguish live and dead cells. For intracellular staining, freshly isolated cells were treated with, 50 ng/ml PMA, 1 μg/ml ionomycin and Golgi-stop (BD Pharmingen), 4 hrs, 37° C. in RPMI containing 2% mouse serum (Janvier, France). Cells were then washed with PBS and stained with anti-IFN-γ (PE-cy7) and anti-IL-17 (PE) using BD Cytofix/Cytoperm™ Kit following the instructions.

Protein Extraction.

Tumors were mechanically dissociated with lysis buffer (T-PER Tissue Protein Extraction Reagent, PIERCE) containing protease inhibitor (complete Mini EDTA-free, Roche). Tumor lysate was then centrifuged at 10000×g, 5 min, 4° C. to obtain supernatant.

Purification and Adoptive Transfer of γδ Cells.

Naïve C57Bl/6 mice aged between 8-10 weeks were sacrificed and the skin-draining lymph nodes (LNs) including inguinal, popliteal, superficial cervical, axillary and brachial LNs were collected. LNs were squeezed with tweezers gently in digesting buffer, kept at 37° C. for 20 min and then pass through 40 μM cell strainer to get single cell suspension. Dead cells were removed using Dead Cell Removal Kit (Miltenyi Biotec) before purifying γδ T cells with TCRγ/δ⁺ T Cell Isolation Kit (Miltenyi Biotec). An autoMACS™ Separator was used with the recommended programs. Purity of this isolation normally reached 95%. The TCR δ⁻ CD3⁺ cells fraction was also collected from the final separation step and was called ‘non γδ T’ cells for some experiments. Day 2 after DX or PBS treatment, 2.5×10⁵ cells were injected directly into the tumor with insulin syringes in adoptive transfer setting.

T Cell Priming and Tumor Vaccination.

EG7 cells were pretreated either with 5 μg/ml OXP or left untreated for 24 hrs, washed thoroughly and injected at 1 million/50 ml into the syngeneic mice foodpad. CpG/OVA (CpG (5 μg/mouse), OVA (1 mg/mouse)) and PBS injection were used as positive and negative controls. In some setting, neutralizing antibody (200 μg/mouse) for IL-17A or isotype control antibody was injected i.p. 5 days later, the popliteal lymph node cells were harvested, seeded in 96 well plate at 3×10⁵/well and restimulated with 1 mg/ml OVA protein. IFN-γ secretion was measured by OptEIA™ Mouse IFN-γ ELISA kit (BD Bioscience). MCA205 cells were treated with 2 μM MTX for 18 hrs, washed thoroughly and injected into left flank subcutaneously at 0.3 million/mouse. PBS was used as control. Mice were rechallenged with 5×10⁴ live MCA205 cells in the right flank 7 days later. Tumor growth was monitored every 2-3 days.

DC-Tumor Mixed Lymphocyte Cultures.

DC were propagated in Iscoves's medium (Sigma Aldrich) supplemented with J558 supernatant, 100 UI/ml Penicillin, 100 μg/ml Streptomycin, 2 mM L-glutamine, 50 μM 2-mercaptoethanol (Sigma), 10% heat-inactivated and filtered, 10% FCS and 40 ng/ml GM-CSF. DC were used between day 8 and 12 when the proportion of CD11c/MHC class II+ cells was >80%. In mixed cocultures, DC were seeded at 10⁵/100 μl/well in U bottom 96 well plates. Tumor cells were treated with 25 μM DX or 2 μM MTX for 16 hrs, washed in PBS and added into these wells at 7.5×10⁵/100 μl/well. 2×10⁴/50 μl γδ T cells were added into the wells 12 hrs later. Supernatant was collected 48 hrs later.

Statistical Analyses of Experimental Data.

All results are expressed as means±standard error of the mean (SEM) or as ranges when appropriate. For two groups, normal distributions were compared by Student's t test. Non-normal samplings were compared using the Mann-Whitney's test or Wilcoxon matched paired test when appropriate. The log-rank test was used for analysis of Kaplan-Meier survival curve. Statistical analyses were performed using Prism 5 software (GraphPad, San Diego, Calif.). P values of <0.05 were considered significant.

Results

Patterns of Cytokine/Chemokine Production Post-Chemotherapy

Anthracyclines induce immune responses that culminate in CD8⁺ T cell- and IFN-γ/IFN-γ R dependent antitumor effects (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009). To further study chemotherapy-induced immune effectors at the site of tumor retardation, inventors performed quantitative RT-PCR to compare the transcription profile of 40 immune gene products expressed in MCA205 tumors which were regressing in response to chemotherapy with the anthracycline DX 8 days post-treatment, with that of progressing tumors due to the absence of treatment (PBS control) (FIG. 1A). Several Th1-related gene products were specifically induced in regressing tumors (FIG. 1B). Thus, the Th1 transcription factors Eomes and Tbx21 (also called T-bet), as well as the end product IFN-γ, were increased 4-5 fold in doxorubicine (DX) versus PBS-treated tumors (FIG. 8A). Unsupervised hierarchical clustering indicates that IFN-γ production correlates with that of the transcription factor Tbx21, which is the quintessential Th1 transcription factor. By day 3-7, the protein levels of IFN-γ also increased in regressing MCA205 sarcoma (FIG. 1C). Other surrogate markers of Th1 responses (lymphotoxin-β, Ccl5, Cxcl10, Cxcl9, TNF-α) were also significantly induced at the mRNA level following anthracycline treatment (FIG. 1B). Unexpectedly, another set of gene products were also overexpressed in the context of anthracycline-induced tumor regression. These genes encoded IL-7R, IL-21, AHR, Cxcl2 and Foxp3, suggesting that inflammation and/or tissue repair took place in the tumor bed (FIG. 1B, FIG. 8A). Indeed, on days 3 to day 8 post-chemotherapy, the protein levels of the inflammatory cytokine IL-17 were significantly increased within tumor homogenates (FIG. 1C, right panel). Reenforcing this finding, we show that AHR, a sensor of small chemical compounds, is involved in the success of anthracyclines based therapy in this model. CH-223191 is a pure antagonist of AHR since it does not have any agonist actions up to 100 μM (Kim et al., 2006). Blocking AHR with CH-223191 markedly reduced the efficacy of DX on established cancers in vivo (FIG. 1D) although CH-223191 had no cell-autonomous effects on the tumor cells, alone or in combination with anthracyclines (FIG. 8B). Moreover, DX (compared with PBS) induced a 3-fold increase in the proportions of both IFN-γ and IL-17 producing tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) as tested by flow cytometry (FIG. 1E). All together, these data show that chemotherapy modify the chemokine/cytokine tumor microenvironment, leading to early Th17-geered inflammation together with a marked Th1 polarization.

γδ T Lymphocytes are the Major Source of IL-17 in Several Models of Anticancer Chemotherapy.

To identify the cellular source of IFN-γ and IL-17, TILs were immunophenotyped by a combination of cell surface staining and intracellular detection of the cytokines with flow cytometry. Careful analyses revealed that 8 days post-chemotherapy in MCA205 sarcomas, the major source of IFN-γ were CD8⁺ T cells, while that of IL-17 were mostly TCR δ⁺ T cells rather than CD4⁺ Th17 cells (FIG. 2A). Inventors further analyzed the IFN-γ and IL-17 production by each subset of TILs. It turned out that CD4⁺ T cells could produce IFN-γ and a small amount of IL-17 while CD8⁺ T and γδ T cells were polarized to become potent producers of IFN-γ and IL-17 respectively. Doxorubicin-based chemotherapy substantially enhanced IFN-γ production by CD8⁺ and CD4⁺ TILs as well as IL-17 production by γδ TILs (FIG. 2B) and induced a more intense infiltration of these cytokine producers (FIG. 2C). A kinetic study indicated that γδ TILs invade MCA205 tumor beds at early time points (FIG. 2D), rapidly divide (as indicated by the expression of Ki67) (FIG. 2E) and produce IL-17 shortly after chemotherapy, with significant increases over the background 4 days after anthracyline injection (FIG. 2D, left panel). This early induction of IL-17 contrasts with the comparatively late induction of IFN-γ production by CD8⁺ T cells, which emerged 8 days after chemotherapy (FIG. 2D, right panel).

To generalize these findings, inventors systematically immunophenotyped TILs in CT26 colon cancer treated by a single intratumoral injection of DX which significantly retarded tumor growth (FIG. 9A). Indeed, the majority of IL-17+ TILs were CD45⁺CD3^(bright) cells and they failed to express CD4 but were positively stained with anti-TCR δ specific antibodies (FIG. 9B). Consistently, chemotherapy increased the frequency of IFN-γ producing CD8⁺ T lymphocytes (Tc1) (FIG. 9C) and IL-17-producing γδ T cells (γδ T17) (FIG. 9D) among TILs. Next, inventors monitored transplantable TS/A mammary carcinomas treated with local radiotherapy which operates in a T cell-dependent manner (Apetoh et al., 2007). Irradiation of TS/A tumors led either to tumor regression (TR) or to no response and hence tumor progression (TP) (FIG. 3A). An accumulation of both Tc1 (FIG. 3B) and γδ T17 (FIG. 3C) lymphocytes was found in those tumors that responded to radiotherapy, but not in those that continued to proliferate or in untreated controls. Importantly, in all three tumor models that were tested, a clear correlation was observed between invading γδ T17 and Tc1 cells in tumor beds (FIG. 2F, FIG. 3D, FIG. 9E). Thus, chemotherapy triggers the accumulation of cytokine producing TILs in the tumor bed. This applies to IFN-γ-producing CD8⁺ T cells, which have previously been shown to contribute to the chemotherapy-induced anticancer immune response (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009), as well as to IL-17-producing γδ T cells, which inventors decided to characterize at the functional level.

Most γδ T17 TILs had an effector memory phenotype which was preponderantly CD44⁺ CD62L⁻CD69⁺ granzyme B⁺. γδ T17 TILs did not express CD27, CD122, Scart 2 (a marker of γδ T17 cells residing in skin draining lymph nodes), CD24, c-kit or NKG2D (FIG. 10). Flow cytometry indicated that around 60% of tumor filtrating γδ T17 utilized Vγ4 chain (FIG. 10) but expression of Vγ1 and Vγ7 chain was rarely found (data not shown). We then sorted γδ T17 TILs which do not express Vγ1, Vγ4 or Vγ7 and performed single-cell PCRs (Boucontet et al., 2005) to examine their Vγ chain usage. These experiments revealed that 21 out of 23 clones contained a functional Vγ6 rearrangement identical to the one found in fetal γδ T cells, indicating that most γδ T17 TILs express either Vγ4 or Vγ6.

Inventors conclude that, during chemotherapy or radiotherapy-induced tumor regression, distinct subsets of γδ T cells accumulate in tumor beds and become γδ T17 cells, correlating with (and presumably preceding) the accumulation of Tc1 cells.

The IL-17/IL-17R Pathway is Involved in the Immunogenicity of Cell Death

Since both γδ T17 and Tc1 cells accumulated within tumors after chemotherapy or radiotherapy in a coordinated fashion, inventors determined whether neutralizing antibodies directed against their signature cytokines IL-17 and IFN-γ could mitigate the efficacy of anticancer therapies. The neutralization of either IFN-γ or IL-17 negatively affected the growth-retarding effect of DX against MCA205 tumors (FIG. 4A). Inventors have reported that specific anti-tumor immune response relies on CD8⁺ T cells which could be primed by tumor cells undergoing immunogenic cell death and developed a system in which IFN-γ production by OVA-specific T cells could be triggered by OXP-treated EG7 cells (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009). Inventors utilize this system to check whether IL-17 is involved in initiating the specific anti-tumor response, comparing normal wild type (WT) with IL-17Rα^(−/−) mice. In this assay, the absence of IL-17Rα fully abolished antigen-specific T cell priming in response to dying cells, yet had no negative effect to T cell priming by OVA holoprotein admixed with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides (FIG. 4B). Consistently, a neutralizing anti-IL-17A antibody (but not the isotype control antibody) markedly impaired the OVA-specific T cell response to OXP-treated EG7 cells (FIG. 4C). Since Th1/Tc1 immune responses against dying tumor cells mediate a prophylactic protection against a rechallenge with live tumor cells (Apetoh et al., 2007; Ghiringhelli et al., 2009), inventors addressed the functional relevance of IL-17/IL-17Rα pathway in such a protective immunity. The subcutaneous injection of anthracycline mitoxanthrone (MTX) treated MCA205 sarcoma cells could protect WT mice (but not athymic nude mice) against rechallenge with live MCA205 tumor cells (FIG. 4D). The efficacy of this vaccination was attenuated in IL-17Rα^(−/−) mice. Since IL-17 was not significantly produced by CD4⁺ T cells, neither in the draining LN (not shown) nor in tumor beds during chemotherapy (FIGS. 2A, 2B, FIG. 9B), they refrained from investigating Th17 cells and rather focused on γδ T and NKT cells as potential IL-17 producers (Mills, 2008; Pichavant et al., 2008) that might contribute to the anticancer vaccination by dying tumor cells. While CD1d^(−/−) mice, which lack NKT population (Godfrey et al., 2009), were undistinguishable from WT controls in their ability to protect themselves against the live tumor cells rechallenge after dying tumor cell vaccine, Vγ4/6^(−/−) mice (Sunaga et al., 1997) exhibited a reduced capacity to mount an anticancer immune response (FIG. 4D). These results suggest that IL-17, IL-17R, as well as γδ T17 cells, all play an important role in the afferent phase of the immune response against dying tumor cells that includes T cell priming for IFN-γ production.

γδ T Lymphocytes are Indispensable for the Efficacy of Chemotherapy

To further evaluate the contribution of γδ T cells to the therapeutic action of mitoxanthrone on established MCA205 sarcomas, such tumors were implanted in age and sex matched WT, TCR δ^(−/−), Vγ4/6^(−/−) and then subjected to systemic chemotherapy. As compared to wild type controls, the absence of the TCR 6 chain, as well as Vγ4 and Vγ6 γδ T cells greatly reduced the efficacy of chemotherapy (FIG. 5A).

Expression of CCR6 is a hallmark of Th17 cells at the phenotypic and functional (Reboldi et al., 2009) levels during some inflammatory processes. Inventors therefore analyzed the role of CCR6 in the efficacy of chemotherapy. Since CCL20 was abundant in tumor tissues post-chemotherapy (data not shown), they assessed whether γδ T17 cells could be recruited in a CCL20/CCR6-dependent manner. The tumoricidal activity of DX against CT26 was not affected by repetitive systemic injections of neutralizing anti-CCL20 mAb before and during anthracyclines treatment (FIG. 5B). Consistently, anthracyclines treatment against established MCA205 sarcoma remained efficient in CCR6 loss-of-function mice (FIG. 5C). Moreover, CCR6 deficiency did not influence tumor infiltration by γδ T17 (FIG. 11). Therefore, both Vγ4/γ6 γδ T cells and their effector molecular pathway IL-17/IL-17R are involved in the prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy of anticancer agents while CCR6 signaling seems to be indispensable for their colonization of tumor bed.

IL-1β-Dependent Activation of γδ T Lymphocytes

To explore the molecular requirements for γδ T17 cell activation in situ, inventors sorted γδ T cells from the skin-draining lymph nodes (LNs) of naive mice (representing about 1% of the T cell pool contained in LN). Among these γδ T cells, around 70% harbored the Vγ4 TCR and they vigorously produced IL-17 (but not IFN-γ) upon stimulation with PMA/ionomycine (data not shown) (Do et al.). In contrast to Th17 cells (Ivanov et al., 2006), LN resident γδ T cells failed to produce IL-17 in response to TGF-β or IL-6, alone or in combination with IL-1β (FIG. 6A). However, LN-resident γδ T cells potently secreted IL-17A (and IL-22, not shown) in response to the combined stimulation with IL-1β plus IL-23 (FIG. 6A). TCR engagement also synergized with IL-1β (and to a lesser extent with IL-23) to trigger IL-17 secretion by LN-resident γδ T cells (FIG. 6B). It is noteworthy that these stimuli specifically activated IL-17 (FIGS. 6A, 6B) but not IFN-γ production (data not shown) by γδ T cells. Since Vγ4⁺ and Vγ6⁺ γδ T cells were activated (as indicated by their Ki67⁺, GzB⁺, CD69⁺, IL-17⁺ phenotype) within tumor beds after chemotherapy, inventors addressed the question as to whether dying tumor cells could directly or indirectly (through myeloid antigen presenting cells) promote the activation of Vγ4⁺ and Vγ6⁺ T cells. Although doxorubicin-treated MCA205 cells failed to directly induce IL-17 (or IL-22, not shown) secretion by γδ T cells, they did so indirectly. Thus, bone marrow-derived DC (DC) that had been loaded with doxorubicin-treated MCA205 cells (FIG. 6C) or CT26 cells (not shown) but not with live tumor cells markedly stimulated the release of IL-17 (and IL-22, not shown) by γδ T cells (FIG. 6C). As a quality control for in vitro generated DC, the expression of CD11c, MHC class II, CD11b and F4/80 was assessed. Only ‘qualified’ DC preparations that contain functional DC (>80% CD11c⁺MHCII⁺) rather than macrophages (>70% CD11b⁺F4/80⁺CD11c) can activate γδ T cells for IL-17 production when they encountered DX treated tumor cells (data not shown).

Dying tumor cells (exposed to doxorubicin) but not live tumor cells could trigger IL-113 production by DC (FIG. 6C and (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009)). The IL-17 production by γδ T cells was dependent on IL-1β since the IL-1R1/IL-1β antagonist IL-1RA entirely abrogated the DC/γδ T cell cross-talk in the presence of dying cells while IL-1β production was not modified (FIG. 6D). Blocking AHR could also hamper IL-17 production in this co-culture system. In contrast, neutralizing IL-23 or blocking IL-23R or blocking IL-18/IL-18R interaction failed to damp down the production of IL-17 (and IL-22, not shown) by the combination of DC, dying tumor cells and γδ T cells (FIG. 6D). It is conceivable that the γδ TCR might be engaged by an MHC class I-like molecule presented by DC because the IL-17 production by γδ T cells was significantly improved by cell contact or a TCR cross-linking. Indeed, the supernatants (containing at least IL-1β) of BMDCs loaded with dying cells could not entirely substitute for dying cell loaded DC in these in vitro assays (not shown). Blocking AHR markedly attenuated IL-17 production by γδ T cells, both at the level of cytokine release (not shown) and on a per cell basis (FIG. 6E, left panel) in response to CD3 cross-linking and IL-1β and/or IL-23, yet did not affect γδ T cell viability (not shown) or their activation pattern (FIG. 6E, right panel).

Since inventors found that IL-1β was required for the production of IL-17 by γδ T cell in vitro, they assumed that γδ T cells might be activated locally by this cytokine. Indeed, the adoptive transfer of γδ T cells (instead of the non γδ T cells purified from naïve skin LNs) into tumor beds two days post-DX ameliorated the efficacy of chemotherapy (FIG. 7A) while infusion of γδ T cells into non-treated tumors (failing to release IL-1β) could not control tumor outgrowth (FIG. 7A). However, when γδ T cells were derived from IL-1R1 loss-of-function mice, the synergistic antitumor effects of doxorubicine and adoptively transferred γδ T cells were lost (FIG. 7B), demonstrating the key role of endogenous IL-1β in driving the γδ T cell response.

Altogether, the present data indicate that chemotherapy-induced cell death stimulates DC to release IL-1β, which in turn is required for IL-17 production by γδ T cells. γδ T cells can act as enhancers of the immunological component of anticancer immune therapies, provided that they express the IL-1R.

Conclusions

Example 1 demonstrate a critical role for a subset of γδ T cells, particularly the Vγ4 and Vγ6-expressing subsets, which produce the effector cytokine IL-17, in the adaptive immune response against dying tumor cells which contributes to the efficacy of anthracycline-based conventional anticancer chemotherapy. Inventor demonstrate that the IL-17/IL-17Rα signalling pathway is required for the priming of IFN-γ-secreting antigen-specific T cells by tumor cells exposed to chemotherapy (FIGS. 4B, 4C). This tumor-specific Tc1-mediated immune response is essential for the protective anticancer immunity that is triggered by immunization with dying tumor cells (FIG. 4D) because this protective immune response is lost in athymic nude mice (FIG. 4D) or when CD8+ T cells are depleted (Casares et al., 2005) or when the IFN-γ/IFN-γR system is blocked either by injection of neutralizing antibodies or knockout of IFN-γ (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009). Accordingly, inventors found that the absence of IL-17Rα reduced the capacity of mice to mount a protective immune response against dying tumor cells (FIG. 4D).

When exploring the source of IL-17 production elicited by dying tumor cells, inventors found that γδ T cells were the quantitatively and functionally most important IL-17 producers, based on several observations. First, in the context of anticancer chemotherapy, γδ T17 cells accumulated within tumors (FIGS. 2B, 2C, 3C, FIG. 9D). Indeed, most IL-17 producing cells were positive for γδ T markers (FIG. 2A, FIG. 9B). Secondly, antigen-specific CD4⁺ T cells in lymph nodes (LNs) draining the dying tumor cells are polarized to a Th1 cytokine (IL-2 and IFN-γ) secretion pattern (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009) instead of a Th17 pattern (data not shown). Also, IL-6 and TGF-β, two key regulatory cytokines essential for the differentiation of Th17 cells (Ivanov et al., 2006) were dispensable for the efficacy of chemotherapy (FIGS. 12A, 12B), suggesting that Th17 cells are not required for the anticancer immune response that amplify the effect of chemotherapy. Thirdly, when popliteal lymph nodes were recovered from mice that had been injected with dying (but not live) tumor cells through footpad, the re-stimulation of LN-resident cells using anti-CD3ε Ab+IL-23 readily enhanced IL-17 production (not shown), a feature common to memory T cells, especially innate NKT (Rachitskaya et al., 2008) and γδ T cells (Sutton et al., 2009) (FIG. 6B). Fourthly, the subset of NKT cell capable of producing IL-17 in LN(CD103⁺CD4⁻NK1.1⁻CCR6⁺ CD1d tetramer⁺) (Doisne et al., 2009) did not appear to be specifically triggered by dying cells in vivo (not shown). Moreover, CD1d^(−/+) mice, which lack NKT cells, were indistinguishable from WT mice when the efficacy of chemotherapy was assessed in prophylactic vaccination settings (FIG. 4D). Finally, knockout Vγ4/6 or TCR δ attenuated the protective antitumor vaccination with dying tumor cells (FIG. 4D) and reduced the efficacy of the anthracycline-based chemotherapy on established tumors (FIG. 5A).

In the context of immune responses stimulated by dying cancer cells, it clearly appears that IL-1β, an inflammatory cytokine that is produced by dendritic cells (DC), plays a major role in stimulating IL-17 production and the anticancer function of γδ T cells. The key role of IL-1β in regulating γδ T cells function was shown by using IL-1RA in cocultures of DC/γδ T cells in the presence of dying tumor cells (FIG. 6D). Also, γδ T cells that lack IL-1R cannot amplify the tumoricidal action of anthracyclines as IL-1R expressing γδ T cells do (FIG. 7B). Interestingly, DC-mediated IL-1β secretion was also found mandatory for the polarization of CD8⁺ T cells towards a Tc1 pattern (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009). The herein provided results demonstrate the importance of DC, γδ T17 cells and Tc1 cells (IFN-γ producing CD8⁺ T lymphocytes) to favor optimal anticancer immune responses. Inventors noticed a strong correlation between γδ T17 and Tc1 cells post-chemotherapy in three different tumor models and the fact that the emergence of IL-17 production precedes that of IFN-γ production by Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (TILs). It is well possible that besides helping developing Tc1 response, γδ T17 cells might enhance the chemoattraction of Tc1 effector cells into the tumor beds. These results are compatible with observations obtained in a cancer-unrelated context, microbial infection, in which γδ T17 associated with Th1 responses to exert protective immune response (Umemura et al., 2007). As IL-17 could not directly induce IFN-γ production or enhance proliferation of CD8⁺ T cells (data not shown), the present results imply a causal relationship between the presence of γδ T17 cells and the recruitment of antitumor effector Tc1 cells into tumor beds.

Example 2 The Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism R554K (rs2066853) in AHR Gene Affects the Efficacy of Conventional Anti-Cancer Therapy in a Neoadjuvant Setting (Before Surgery) Breast Cancer Patients

The inventors observed that the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) R554K (rs2066853—SEQ ID NO: 7) in AHR gene (NCBI Reference Sequences: AHR genomic DNA: NC_(—)000007.13 (SEQ ID NO: 1); AHR mRNA: NM_(—)001621.3 (SEQ ID NO: 2)) affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy in a neoadjuvant setting in breast cancer patients (n=239). Indeed, the proportion of pathological complete responses was higher in AHR wild-type group than in mutated group of patients treated with anthracyclines (24.3% in patients carrying the AHR normal allele versus 11.4% in patient with the R554K mutated allele; p=0.02 by Chi² analysis) (FIG. 13). In other words, the AHR R554K mutated allele enhanced the probability of relapse in patients treated with anthracyclines. Other AHR polymorphisms have the same predictive value, in particular the following AHR SNPs: rs10250822 (SEQ ID NO: 3), rs11505406 (SEQ ID NO: 4), rs1476080 (SEQ ID NO: 5), rs17779352 (SEQ ID NO: 6), rs2074113 (SEQ ID NO: 8), rs2158041 (SEQ ID NO: 9), rs2282885 (SEQ ID NO: 10), rs34938955 (SEQ ID NO: 11), rs35225673 (SEQ ID NO: 12), rs4986826 (SEQ ID NO: 13), rs713150 (SEQ ID NO: 14), rs7796976 (SEQ ID NO: 15), and rs7811989 (SEQ ID NO: 16).

The numbers and percentages of patients enrolled in the case-control study are displayed in a contingency table (Table 3) based on the primary endpoint (pathological complete response) and the genotype of AHR-R554K (rs2066853) SNP.

TABLE 3 AHR-Arg554Lys mutated AHR-Arg554Lys N (%) wild type N (%) No pathological complete 62 (88.6) 128 (75.7) response (No pCR) Pathological complete  8 (11.4)  41 (24.3) response (pCR) Materials and Methods Clinical Study Design

The inventors retrospectively constructed patient database using data obtained from Institut Gustave Roussy (France). All patients provided written informed consent for enrollment in the study. Eligible patients had histologically confirmed sporadic breast cancer. All patients received an anthracycline-based chemotherapy before surgery (FEC protocol in neoadjuvant setting). This study was based on a retrospective cohort (n=197−patients not treated with Herceptin) and a case-control cohort (n=42) matched for age, tumor grade and hormone receptors. The primary endpoint of the study was the pathological complete response. After generation of the patient database and collection of genomic DNA samples, genotyping and statistical analyses were performed in a blinded fashion. A total of 239 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Chi square test was used to compare the distribution of clinical characteristics across the two genotype groups. All analyses were carried out using SPSS software, version 16 (IBM SPSS Statistics, France).

Genotyping

DNA was isolated from frozen blood leukocytes from subjects. The TAQMAN Drug Metabolism Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)11170747_(—)20 was used to genotype the AHR G/A polymorphism (rs2066853). Briefly, 10 ng of genomic DNA was mixed with 5 μL of 2× TaqMan Genotyping Master Mix (Applied Biosystems) and 0.25 μL of 40× genotyping assay in a final volume of 10 μL. Temperature cycling and real time fluorescence measurement were done using an StepOnePlus System (Applied Biosystems). The genotypes were assigned to each subject, by comparing the signals from the two fluorescent probes, FAM and VIC, and calculating the −log(FAM/VIC) ratio for each data point with the StepOne software v2.0 (Applied Biosystems). The other AHR SNPs have been tested with the same procedure. Examples of the following TAQMAN Genotyping assays have been used: rs10250822 (SEQ ID NO: 3) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)2541466_(—)10), rs1476080 (SEQ ID NO: 5) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)8302430_(—)10), rs2282885 (SEQ ID NO: 10) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)2541460_(—)1_), rs2158041 (SEQ ID NO: 9) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)2541454_(—)30), rs713150 (SEQ ID NO: 14) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)2541463_(—)10), rs7796976 (SEQ ID NO: 15) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)30633941_(—)10), rs2074113 (SEQ ID NO: 8) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)16163703_(—)10), rs7811989 (SEQ ID NO: 16) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)29150577_(—)20) rs4986826 (SEQ ID NO: 13) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)25650166_(—)20), rs17779352 (SEQ ID NO: 6) (TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)25650165_(—)20).

Example 3 Restoration of the Immunogenicity of Cisplatin-Induced Cancer Cell Death

In this example, inventors specifically addressed the question why CDDP—in contrast to the related compound OXP—fails to induce immunogenic cell death. To address this question, they monitored several cell lines that express a series of cell death-relevant biosensors or biomarkers, allowing them to map the defect in the CRT exposure pathway elicited by CDDP. Furthermore, they designed a screening system allowing them to identify compounds that are inert with regard to apoptotic signalling, yet can restore CDDP's capacity to induce CRT exposure and to stimulate immunogenic cell death.

Materials and Methods

Reagents and Materials

Cell death was induced with MTX, CDDP (Sigma, Saint Louis, USA) or OXP (Sanofi-Aventis, Paris, France). Quinacrine and THAPS were purchased from Sigma. PeIF2a and eIF2a antibody has been purchased from cell signaling. Cell culture media and selection antibiotics were from Gibco.

Cell Culture

U2OS, 293FT and HeLa were cultured in DMEM medium supplemented with 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum, 1 mM sodium pyruvate and 10 mM Hepes buffer. CT26, Lewis lung cell carcinoma and MC205 cells were grown in RPMI supplemented with identical components. U2OS clones were selected with 1 mg/ml G418 (Gibco) or Zeocin or 5 μg/ml Blasticidine and stable clones were kept under 200 μg/ml or 1 μg/ml selection respectively.

Viral Transduction

Lentiviral particles for the transduction of cells with H2B-RFP have been produced in 293FT cells by means of the ViraPower lentiviral expression system (Invitrogen) following the manufacturer's instructions. For this purpose an H2B-RFP cDNA sequence has been cloned into the pLenti6 vector by means of the gateway system.

HT-CRT Stably Expressing U2OS Cells

The HaloTag® sequence was amplified from a pHT2 plasmid (Promega) as Noll restriction fragment with the STOP codon removed from the Halotag sequence. For the PCR amplification the following primers were used: Forward: 5′-AAGCGGCCGCAATGGGATCCGAAATCGGTAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 453); Reverse: 5′-AAGCGGCCGCGCCGGCCAGCCCGGGGAGCC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 454). PCR products were isolated on agarose gel, purified using the QIAquick Gel Extraction kit (Qiagen), and digested with the restriction enzyme NotI (Biolabs). The digested PCR product was ligated into the CRT-GFP plasmids at the NotI restriction site after removing the GFP sequence. Transfection of U2OS cells with the HaloTag®-CRT was carried out with Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) following the manufacturer's instructions. Stable clones stably were selected by means of Zeocin selection.

CRT-GFP, Bax-GFP; G3BP-GFP; GFP-LC3 Stably Expressing U2OS Cells

U2OS cells have been transfected by means of Lipofectamin 2000 following the manufacturer's instruction with either CRT-GFP, Bax-GFP, G3BP-GFP or LC3-GFP cDNA. Subsequently the cells have been stably selected using G418 selection antibiotic (Gibco). Resistant cells have been single cell sorted with a FACSvantage cell sorter and GFP expressing clones have been selected. Some of the clones have further been stably transduced with lentiviral particles expressing H2B-RFP. These cells have again been single cell sorted to identify double fluorescent clones.

Compound Screen for CRT-Exposing Drugs Death Assays

One day prior to the experiment, 5×10³ U2OS cells stably expressing CRT-GFP and H2B-RFP were seeded into 96-well Black/Clear Imaging Plates pre-treated with poly-L-lysine (BD Biosciences, San Jose, Calif., USA). The ICCB known bioactive compounds library (Enzo life science) (BML2840), comprising 480 distinct compounds, was added at a concentration range from 90 nM to 48 μM in the presence or absence of 50 μM CDDP. The cells were incubated for 4 h at 37° C. and subsequently fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 20 min. After washing with PBS 4 viewfields per well were acquired by means of a BD pathway 855 automated microscope. The images were segmented and analyzed for GFP-granularity and nuclear shape area using the BD AttoVision software version 1.6 before data mining. The data was statistically evaluated using graph pad. To avoid inter plate variations the data has been intra plate normalized by calculating the ratio to untreated controls for each datapoint.

Cell Death Assays

6×10⁵ U2OS cells were treated with the indicated cell death inducers for 16 h at the indicated concentration. Cell death was quantified by cytofluorometric analysis using a FACS Vantage (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA) as described previously (REF). Thus, cells were stained with 40 nM 3,3 dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC₆(3); Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg., USA) for 30 min at 37° C. and concomitantly with 1 μg/ml propidium iodide (PI; Sigma Aldrich) for 30 min at 37° C. to determine the mitochondrial transmembrane potential. Data were statistically evaluated using CellQuest Pro software (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA).

Quinacrine Immunofluorescence

U2OS cells were treated with the indicated cell death inducers for 16 h at the indicated concentrations. Subsequently, cells were labeled with quinacrine as described previously (Martins et al., 2009). In short, cells were labeled with 1 μM quinacrine in Krebs-Ringer solution (125 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO₄, 0.7 mM KH₂PO₄, 2 mM CaCl₂, 6 mM glucose and 25 mM Hepes, pH 7.4) for 30 min at 37° C. Thereafter, cells were stained with 1 μg/ml PI (Invitrogen) and 1 μg/ml Hoechst 33342 (Invitrogen) for 10 min, rinsed with Krebs-Ringer solution and fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde for 15 min at room temperature. Cells were examined with a BD Pathway™ 435 High-Content Biolmager workstation (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA) by using an UApo/340 ×20/0.75 objective (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan).

Quinacrine Flow Cytometry

6×10⁵ U2OS cells were treated with the cell death inducers for 24 h. After incubation in quinacrine solution (as described above), cells were rinsed and resuspended in PBS containing 1 μg/ml PI. The samples were analyzed by means of a FACS Vantage (Becton Dickinson) and the data was statistically evaluated using the CellQuest Pro software (BD Biosciences).

ATP Release Assays

After cell death induction, extracellular ATP was measured by luciferin-based ENLITEN ATP Assay (Promega, Madison, USA) following the manufacturer's instructions. Intracellular ATP was measured using an ATP Assay kit (Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany) based on luciferin-luciferase conversion following the manufacturer's instructions. For assessment of the chemoluminescent signal, the plates were read in a Fluostar luminometer (BMG Labtech).

Analysis of Surface Exposed CRT

Cells were treated with the indicated agents for 4 hours and the day after they were collected. For the HaloTag® staining, cells were incubated for 30 min with HaloTag® Alexa Fluor® 488 Ligand, diluted in DMEM medium containing 10% of fetal bovine serum. Then cells were washed and incubated in DMEM medium for 30 min. Thereafter, cells were rinsed with PBS and stained with 1 μg/ml PI (Invitrogen). For CRT immune staining, cells were washed twice with PBS and fixed in 0.25% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 5 min. After washing again twice in cold PBS, cells were incubated for 30 min with primary antibody, diluted in cold blocking buffer (2% fetal bovine serum in PBS), followed by washing and incubation with the Alexa488-conjugated monoclonal secondary antibody in a blocking buffer (for 30 min). Each sample was then analyzed by FACScan (Becton-Dickinson) to identify cell surface CRT. Isotype-matched IgG antibodies were used as controls, and the fluorescent intensity of stained cells was gated on PI-negative cells. The same staining procedure was applied to U2OS CRT-GFP expressing cells grown on coverslips using an Alexa546 coupled secondary antibody before analysis in a Leica TCS SPE confocal microscope (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany).

In Vivo Anti-Tumor Vaccination

1×10⁶ MCA205 cells, untreated or treated with either OXP, CDDP were injected subcutaneously into 6-week-old female C57BL/6 mice (Janvier, Charles River) into the lower flank, whereas 5×10⁵ untreated control cells were inoculated into the contralateral flank 6 days later (Casares et al., 2005). Tumor growth was evaluated for at least 50 days. All animals were maintained in specific pathogen-free conditions, and all experiments were carried out according to the Federation of European Laboratory Animal Science Association guidelines.

The Ethics Committee of Institut Gustave Roussy approved all the animal experiments.

Results

Failure of Cisplatin to Induce Calreticulin (CRT) Redistribution from the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) Lumen to the Cell Surface.

To monitor the redistribution of CRT from the ER lumen to peripheral locations close to plasma membrane, inventors generated U2OS cells that stably express a CRT-GFP fusion protein (Snapp et al., 2006). Control experiments revealed that this protein was located in the ER lumen, where most of the endogenous CRT resides (not shown). Upon treatment with mitoxanthrone (MTX) or OXP, two immunogenic cell death inducers, CRT-GFP relocates from a preponderantly perinuclear near-to-diffuse location (which is seen in untreated control cells) to a more peripheral granular distribution (FIG. 14A). This increased “granularity”, which can be quantified using morphometric image analysis software {Rello-Varona, 2010 #37}, is only observed after treatment of the cells with MTX or OXP, but not after treatment with CDDP (FIG. 14A,B). Nonetheless, CDDP was able to induce chromatin condensation, the morphological hallmark of apoptosis as efficiently as MTX or OXP (percentage values in FIG. 14B). Indeed, pairwise comparisons were always performed at the IC₅₀ of both agents, which was ˜600 μM for OXP and ˜150 μM for CDDP in short-term experiments measuring imminent cell death (as indicated by a loss of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential, ΔΨ_(m), see below). Surface immunofluorescence staining of CRT (revealed in red) confirmed that a few of the OXP-elicited CRT-GFP granules that were close to the cell surface, actually extruded CRT, which became accessible to a CRT-specific antibody. Again, no immunodetectable CRT was found on the surface of non-permeabilized cells treated with CDDP (FIG. 14C).

Immunofluorescence detection of CRT requires several washing steps that might perturb the integrity of cells. To avoid this problem, inventors generated a chimeric protein that contains CRT in its N-terminus and the HaloTag® moiety in its C-terminus followed by the KDEL endoplasmic reticulum retention signal (FIG. 14D). This construct can be detected with commercially available HaloTag® ligands, which are either cell-permeable (as exemplified by HaloTag® Alexa Fluor® 488, green fluorescence) or cell-impermeable (as exemplified by HaloTag® TMR Ligand, red fluorescence) (FIG. 14E). The CRT-HaloTag® fusion protein underwent a similar intracellular redistribution (detected by staining with HaloTag® Alexa Fluor® 488) as did CRT-GFP when the cells were treated with MTX (not shown) or OXP. Moreover, U2OS cells expressing the CRT-HaloTag® fusion protein did not stain with the cell-impermeable HaloTag® ligand, unless they were treated with immunogenic cell death inducers such as OXP (FIG. 14F). Again, CDDP failed to induce the surface exposure of CRT-HaloTag®, as determined by fluorescence microscopy (FIG. 14F) or cytofluorometric analysis of HaloTag® TMR Ligand-stained cells (FIG. 14G).

In conclusion, CDDP is unable to induce CRT exposure in conditions in which it does induce nuclear apoptosis.

Failure of Cisplatin to Elicit ER Stress.

When used at their IC₅₀, CDDP and OXP had a comparable potency in inducing nuclear apoptosis (not shown). Moreover, both agents were able to induce mitochondrial perturbations that were assessed by two different methods. First, inventors determined the ΔΨ_(m) dissipation by means of the ΔΨ_(m)-sensitivefluorochrome DiOC₆(3) (FIG. 15A,B). Second, they measured the relocation of a Bax-GFP fusion protein (von Haefen et al., 2004) from a diffuse to a punctate (presumably mitochondrial) pattern (FIG. 15C,D). Both CDDP and OXP induced similar mitochondrial perturbations (FIG. 15).

Moreover, both agents induced a similar release of ATP, which is one of the obligatory signals linked to immunogenic cell death (Ghiringhelli et al., 2009). This result was obtained using two different methods, namely staining of the cells with the ATP-sensitive fluorochrome quinacrine (FIG. 15A,B), or by measuring the residual ATP content within the cells (FIG. 16C) or the ATP secreted into the supernatant by means of a luciferase-based assay (FIG. 16D). Thus, both agents lead to similar perturbations in energy metabolism.

However, OXP and CDDP ware rather different in their capacity to elicit the redistribution of G3BP-GFP (Tourriere et al., 2003) or LC3-GFP (Kabeya et al., 2000) from a diffuse to a punctiform distribution, which indicates the formation of stress granules (FIG. 17A,B) or of autophagosomes (FIG. 17C,D), respectively. This difference was particularly remarkable at early time points. The formation of stress granules and autophagosomes is subordinated to the mandatory phosphorylation of eIF2α, which is also required for the redistribution of CRT to the cell surface (Obeid et al., 2007b). Indeed, OXP was much more efficient than CDDP in inducing eIF2α phosphorylation on serine 51, as determined by means of a phospho-neoepitope-specific antibody (FIG. 17E). Accordingly, the activating phosphorylation of PERK, the principal eIF2α kinase elicited by chemotherapeutic agents (Panaretakis et al., 2009), was detectable shortly after treatment with OXP but not CDDP (FIG. 17E). Altogether, these results suggest that CDDP is much less efficient in inducing an ER stress response than OXP.

Identification of Thapsigargin as an Agent that Reestablishes CRT Relocalization in Response to Cisplatin.

To identify compounds that might restore the defective CRT exposure pathway in tumor cells responding to CDDP, inventors conducted a high-content screen. This screen was based on the utilization of the ICCB library whose 480 components were individually tested for their capacity to stimulate the redistribution of CRT-GFP in U2OS cells that were either left untreated (not shown) or cultured for 4 h in the presence of 150 μM CDDP (FIG. 18A). When the results obtained in the absence and in the presence of CDDP were plotted for each compound individually, one single agent, THAPS, was identified as being particularly efficient in inducing CRT-GFP granularity in the presence (but not in the absence) of CDDP (FIG. 18B). This result was confirmed in several independent determinations on U2OS cells expressing CRT-GFP (FIG. 18C,D). Moreover, THAPS was capable of inducing the redistribution of CRT-HaloTag® (FIG. 19A), as well as that of endogenous CRT (FIG. 19B), as determined using the cell-impermeable CRT-HaloTag® ligand or antibodies recognizing CRT, respectively. While THAPS alone (in the absence of CDDP) was comparably inefficient in inducing CRT-GFP granularity (FIG. 18D), CRT-HaloTag® exposure (FIG. 19A) or native CRT exposure (FIG. 19B), it was highly efficient in the presence of CDDP. Very similar results were obtained in additional cell lines, including human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells (not shown), mouse Lewis lung carcinoma cells (FIG. 19F), colorectal carcinoma CT26 cells (FIG. 19D), and methylcholanthrene-induced MCA205 fibrosarcoma cells (FIG. 19E). Of note, THAPS exhibited no major cytotoxic effects and did not increase the toxicity of CDDP in any of these cellular models, as exemplified for U2OS cells in which inventors monitored ΔΨ_(m) (FIG. 20A), intracellular ATP content (FIG. 20B,C,D) and extracellular ATP release (FIG. 20E).

Confirming the strong correlation between CRT exposure and immunogenicity, CDDP-treated MCA204 cells were inefficient in inducing a protective anticancer immune response when injected subcutaneously into immunocompetent B6Bl57 mice one week before rechallenge with live tumor cells, in conditions in which OXP-treated MCA205 cells readily induce such a tumor-protective response (which precludes the growth of live MCA205 cells). However, the vaccine of dying cells, generated in the presence of CDDP combined with THAPS, elicited an effective anticancer immune response in vivo (FIG. 19F).

In conclusion, THAPS can reestablish the defective CRT exposure and associated immunogenicity of CDDP-induced cell death.

Conclusions

In contrast to other cytotoxic agents including anthracyclins and OXP, CDDP fails to induce immunogenic tumor cell death that would allow the stimulation of an anticancer immune response and hence amplify its therapeutic efficacy. This failure to induce immunogenic cell death can be attributed to CDDP's incapacity to elicit the translocation of CRT from the lumen of the ER to the cell surface. The previous results show that, in contrast to OXP, CDDP is unable to activate the protein kinase-like ER kinase (PERK)-dependent phosphorylation of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α). Accordingly, CDDP also failed to stimulate the formation of stress granules and macroautophagy, two processes that only occur after eIF2α phosphorylation. Using a screening method allowing the following of the voyage of CRT from the ER lumen to the cell surface, inventors identified in particular THAPS, an inhibitor of the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) ATPase (SERCA) as a molecule that on its own does not stimulate CRT exposure, yet endows CDDP with the capacity to do so. Such a molecule is identified, in the context of the present invention, as a compensatory molecule. Thus, the combination of THAPS and CDDP effectively induced the translocation of CRT to the plasma membrane, as well as immunogenic cell death, while each agent alone was inefficient. Altogether, these results underscore the contribution of the ER stress response to the immunogenicity of cell death, in particular the ER Ca²⁺ fluxes for the translocation of CRT to the cell surface.

This experiment also allowed the identification of other compensatory molecules (in particular microtubules destabilizers), identified in the description part, which are also able to induce an immunogenic cell death.

Example 4 Restoration of the Immunogenicity of Conventional Treatment-Induced Cancer Cell Death

The protocol described in example 3 has been applied in example 4 to screen other compounds (FIG. 21) from the US drug collection library from MS discovery (US 090917A). These compounds have been screened at 1 μM.

Inventors analyzed the capacity of the drugs to induce immunogenic cell death or to render the per se non immunogenic anticancer agent mitomycin C immunogenic. To address this question, they generated several cell lines that express a series of cell death- or cell stress-relevant biomarkers. This screening system enabled the identification of compounds that can restore or confer the capacity to induce ER stress-dependent CRT exposure, autophagy-dependent ATP release as well as cell death-dependent HMGB1 release and thereby stimulate immunogenic cell death.

Materials and Methods

Reagents and Materials

Cell death was induced with MTX, MitoC (Sigma, Saint Louis, USA). Quinacrine, digoxin, digitoxin, Ouabain, strophantin, proscillaridin, sanguinarine, DAPI, Hoechst 33342, NAC and GSH were purchased from Sigma. Anti-CRT antibody has been purchased from Abcam and Annexin-FITC from Becton Dickinson. Cell culture media and selection antibiotics were from Gibco.

Cell Culture

U2OS and 293FT were cultured in DMEM medium supplemented with 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum, 1 mM sodium pyruvate and 10 mM Hepes buffer. MCA205 cells were grown in RPMI supplemented with identical components. U2OS clones were selected with 1 mg/ml G418 (Gibco) or Zeocin or 5 μg/ml Blasticidine and stable clones were kept under 200 μg/ml or 1 μg/ml selection respectively.

Viral Transduction

Lentiviral particles for the transduction of cells with H2B-RFP have been produced in 293FT cells by means of the ViraPower lentiviral expression system (Invitrogen) following the manufacturer's instructions. For this purpose an H2B-RFP cDNA sequence has been cloned into the pLenti6 vector by means of the gateway system.

HMGB1-GFP Stably Expressing U2OS Cells

U2OS cells have been transfected by means of Lipofectamin 2000 following the manufacturer's instruction with either HMGB1-GFP cDNA. Subsequently the cells have been stably selected using G418 selection antibiotic (Gibco). Resistant cells have been single cell sorted with a FACSvantage cell sorter and GFP expressing clones have been selected. The clones have further been stably transduced with lentiviral particles expressing H2B-RFP. These cells have again been single cell sorted to identify double fluorescent clones.

Screen for CRT-Exposition Inducing Drugs

One day prior to the experiment, 5×10³ U2OS cells stably expressing CRT-GFP and H2B-RFP were seeded into 96-well Black/Clear Imaging Plates pre-treated with poly-L-lysine (BD Biosciences, San Jose, Calif., USA). The US Drug library (Microsource discovery) (US 090917A), comprising 1280 components, was added at a concentration range from 90 nM to 48 μM in the presence or absence of 50 μM CDDP. The cells were incubated for 4 h at 37° C. and subsequently fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 20 min. After washing with PBS 4 viewfields per well were acquired by means of a BD pathway 855 automated microscope. The images were segmented and analyzed for GFP-granularity and nuclear shape area using the BD AttoVision software version 1.6 before data mining. The data was statistically evaluated using graph pad. To avoid inter plate variations the data has been intra plate normalized by calculating the ratio to untreated controls for each datapoint.

CRT-Exposition Inducing, and ATP-, HMGB1-Releasing Drugs Death Assays

One day prior to the experiment, 5×10³ U2OS cells stably expressing CRT-GFP and H2B-RFP, HMGB1-GFP and H2B-RFP or WT cells were seeded into 96-well Black/Clear Imaging Plates pre-treated with poly-L-lysine (BD Biosciences, San Jose, Calif., USA). The US Drug library (Microsource discovery; US 090917A), comprising 1280 drugs that have reached clinical trial stages in the USA, was used at a concentration of 1 μM. CRT-GFP expressing cells were incubated for 4 h and HMGB1-GFP cell for 24 h at 37° C. and subsequently fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 20 min WT cells were incubate for 16 h before staining with quinacrine (see below). After washing with PBS 4 viewfields per well were acquired by means of a BD pathway 855 automated microscope. The images were segmented and analyzed for GFP-granularity, HMGB1-GFP nuclear intensity and quinacrine cytoplasmic granularity in addition the nuclear shape area was analyzed as a marker for apoptosis using the BD AttoVision software version 1.6 before data mining. The data was statistically evaluated using graph pad. To avoid inter plate variations the data has been intra plate normalized by calculating the ratio to untreated controls for each datapoint.

Cell Death Assays

6×10⁵ U2OS cells were treated with the indicated cell death inducers for 16 h at the indicated concentration. Cell death was quantified by cytofluorometric analysis using a FACS Vantage (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA) upon Annexin/DAPI costaining according to the manufacturer's instruction. Data were statistically evaluated using CellQuest Pro software (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA).

Quinacrine Immunofluorescence

U2OS cells were treated with the indicated cell death inducers or compound library for 16 h at the indicated concentrations. Subsequently, cells were labeled with quinacrine as described previously (Martins et al., 2009). In short, cells were labeled with 1 μM quinacrine in Krebs-Ringer solution (125 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO₄, 0.7 mM KH₂PO₄, 2 mM CaCl₂, 6 mM glucose and 25 mM Hepes, pH 7.4) for 30 min at 37° C. Thereafter, cells were stained with 1 μg/ml PI (Invitrogen) and 1 μg/ml Hoechst 33342 (Invitrogen) for 10 min, rinsed with Krebs-Ringer solution and fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde for 15 min at room temperature. Cells were examined with a BD Pathway™ 435 or 855 High-Content Biolmager workstation (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, USA) by using an UApo/340 ×20/0.75 objective (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan).

Quinacrine Flow Cytometry

6×10⁵ U2OS cells were treated with the cell death inducers for 24 h. After incubation in quinacrine solution (as described above), cells were rinsed and resuspended in PBS containing 1 μg/ml PI. The samples were analyzed by means of a FACS Vantage (Becton Dickinson) and the data was statistically evaluated using the CellQuest Pro software (BD Biosciences).

ATP Release Assays

After cell death induction, extracellular ATP was measured by luciferin-based ENLITEN ATP Assay (Promega, Madison, USA) following the manufacturer's instructions. Intracellular ATP was measured using an ATP Assay kit (Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany) based on luciferin-luciferase conversion following the manufacturer's instructions. For assessment of the chemoluminescent signal, the plates were read in a Fluostar luminometer (BMG Labtech).

Analysis of Surface Exposed CRT

For CRT immune staining, cells were washed twice with PBS and fixed in 0.25% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 5 min. After washing again twice in cold PBS, cells were incubated for 30 min with primary antibody, diluted in cold blocking buffer (2% fetal bovine serum in PBS), followed by washing and incubation with the Alexa488-conjugated monoclonal secondary antibody in a blocking buffer (for 30 min). Each sample was then analyzed by FACScan (Becton-Dickinson) to identify cell surface CRT. Isotype-matched IgG antibodies were used as controls, and the fluorescent intensity of stained cells was gated on PI-negative cells. The same staining procedure was applied to U2OS CRT-GFP expressing cells grown on coverslips using an Alexa546 coupled secondary antibody before analysis in a Leica TCS SPE confocal microscope (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany).

In Vivo Anti-Tumor Vaccination

1×10⁶ MCA205 cells, untreated or treated with either OXP, CDDP were injected subcutaneously into 6-week-old female C57BL/6 mice (Janvier, Charles River) into the lower flank, whereas 5×10⁵ untreated control cells were inoculated into the contralateral flank 6 days later (Casares et al., 2005). Tumor growth was evaluated for at least 50 days. All animals were maintained in specific pathogen-free conditions, and all experiments were carried out according to the Federation of European Laboratory Animal Science Association guidelines.

The Ethics Committee of Institut Gustave Roussy approved all the animal experiments.

HMGB1 Release ELISA

U2OS cells were seeded in 6 well plates 24 h before the experiment. The medium was changed to fresh DMEM before the treatment was applied. Supernatants were collected at 24 h post treatment, dying tumor cells were removed by centrifugation and supernatants were collected and shock frozen in liquid nitrogen. Quantification of HMGB1 in the collected supernatants was performed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay according to the manufacturer's instructions.

Retrospective Clinical Study

We retrospectively constructed a patient database using data obtained from Institut Gustave Roussy. The patients were divided into the digoxin receiving and into the control group. For each digoxin receiving patient two control patients with identical tumor grade and chemotherapeutic treatment have been chosen. All digoxin receiving patients were treated with digoxin while receiving chemotherapy. Age at diagnosis, pathological tumor size, lymph node involvement, tumor grade, hormone receptors, endocrine treatments, occurrence of events and follow-up were extracted from medical files and recorded in the database. After generation of the patient database statistical analyses were performed in a blinded fashion. Survival rates were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method.

Results

Cardiac Glycosides as Potent Inducers of CRT Exposure, and HMGB1 and ATP Emission.

To identify compounds that might evoke immunogenic cell death or restore the defective immunogenic cell death pathways in tumor cells responding to non immunogenic anticancer drugs, inventors conducted a high-content screen. This screen was based on the use of the US Drug library whose 1280 components were individually tested for their capacity to stimulate the redistribution of CRT-GFP (Martins et al., 2010), the release of HMGB1-GFP (Kepp et al., 2011) or the release of ATP, monitored by quinacrine staining in U2OS cells (Martins et al., 2010). The obtained results were normalized and rank scored to depict the drugs that are most potent in emitting CRT, HMGB1 and ATP (FIG. 28A). When plotted the result revealed, apart from the expected anthracyclins doxorubicin, epirubicin and mitoxanthrone, a functional clustering of Na/K-ATPase inhibitors most pronounce agents of the cardiac glycosides (CG) family as being most potent in exposing CRT, and emitting HMGB1 and ATP.

CRT-GFP redistribution as a surrogate marker for CRT-exposure was validated by means of a cluster analysis in which untreated control, MTX or CG treated CRT-GFP cells were additionally stained with anti-CRT and secondary Alexa546-labeled antibody. A minimum of 500 cells was analysed and increased CRT-GFP redistribution and CRT surface staining was scored. In most of all cases the treated cells displayed the phenotype of CRT-GFP redistribution together with CRT exposure (FIGS. 28B and C) validating the chosen screening model. The exposure of CRT was strongly dependent of reactive oxygen species as the antioxidants NAC and GSH significantly diminished CRT exposure upon Digoxin and Digitoxin treatment (FIG. 28E), which indicates that CGs induce CRT exposure pathways similar to anthracyclins.

All Na/K-ATPase inhibitors that were found amongst the 50 most efficient drugs of the screen were additionally tested for their capacity to expose CRT in WT cells assessed by antibody staining, a method distinct from the primary screening approach. As expected all the data from the primary screen could be validated with regard to Na/K-ATPase inhibitor induced CRT exposure (FIG. 28D). Most Na/K-ATPase inhibitors are intrinsically toxic due to their effect ion-homoeostasis, nevertheless CGs confer the ability to boost cardiac output by increasing cardiac contractility, mostly dependent on elevated intracellular calcium levels in cardiac myocytes. The CGs most widely used in clinics are digoxin and digitoxin, with the first being the most favoured. Focusing on these two inventors could show that both of them induce CRT exposure (FIG. 28F), HMGB1 release (FIG. 28G) and ATP release (FIG. 28H) in a dose dependent fashion but still within the therapeutic window for human application in the nanomolar range thereby validating the findings of the initial HTS approach.

Digoxin Induced Tumor Immunogenicity and Clinical Implication

For further validation anti tumor vaccination studies in immunocompetent mice were conducted. Prior to the in vivo experiments the cytotoxicity of CGs has been reevaluated as it is know that rodent cells are inherently insensitive for CGs (Perne et al., 2009). As expected CT26 an MCA cell were intrinsically insensitive to CGs treatment even at μM ranges compared to human cells as evidenced by Annexin/DAPI staining of mouse and human cells treated with different concentrations of CGs. Nevertheless when combined with the non immunogenic cell death inducer MitoC, which by its own is incapable of exposing CRT, both CGs tested caused exposure of CRT in cotreated cells (FIGS. 29A and 29B).

MCA cells cotreated with digoxin and MitoC inoculated into immunocompetent mice kept living cells of the same kind from forming a tumor as compared to MitoC alone that failed to confer any vaccinating effect (FIG. 29C). Due to its incapacity to induce cell death at the concentrations used digoxin treated cells used for the same studies led to tumor formation at the vaccination site and were therefore not further evaluated.

Retrospective clinical studies on breast cancer patients revealed an increased overall survival in patients that have received digoxin during chemotherapy. Subgroup analysis of this data showed that this effect completely disappears in anthracyclin based chemotherapy but is even more pronounce in non anthracyclin based treatments (FIG. 29D).

Conclusions

HTS designed for monitoring immunogenic signals induced by cytotoxic treatment enabled the screening of a huge number of drugs for their potential to cause or restore immunogenic cell death. Cardiac glycosides and in particular digoxin and digitoxin induced all features of immunogenic cell death. On the contrary MitoC fails to induce immunogenic tumor cell death that would allow the stimulation of an anticancer immune response and hence amplify its therapeutic efficacy. Thus, the combination of Digoxin with MitoC effectively induced immunogenic cell death, while each agent alone was inefficient. In addition clinical data underline the importance of this finding as CG co-treated patients depict an increased overall survival. Altogether, these results indicate again the contribution of ion fluxes especially Ca²⁺ for the translocation of CRT to the cell surface.

Example 5 A Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism in Anyone of CCR1, EIF2AK2, DNAJC10 Genes Affects the Efficacy of Conventional Anti-Cancer Therapy in a Neoadjuvant Setting (Before Surgery) Breast Cancer Patients

Inventors attempted to generate a molecular parameter signature of a pathological complete response (pCR) from two datasets of gene-expression arrays in neoadjuvant (before any surgery step) anthracycline treated-breast cancer patient cohorts (cohorts respectively herein identified HOUSTON FEC and IGGO FEC). One dataset of gene-expression arrays in neoadjuvant taxane treated-breast cancer patients was used as negative control (cohort IGGO TET). Inventors extracted a set of 43 genes from cohort HOUSTON FEC and 53 genes from cohort IGGO FEC/TET implicated in the “calreticulin” pathway from the global sets of genes identified previously in the description (using respectively 22 283 probes and 61 359 probes) to construct the molecular parameter signature.

Inventors performed a molecular classifier development analysis based on a supervised learning classification technique (Support Vector Machines—SVM) (FIG. 22). Leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) was used to estimate the prediction accuracy of the rule determined on the training set (the previously mentioned 43 and 53 genes). One sample is left out, and the remaining samples are used to build the prediction rule, which is then used to classify the left-out sample. Then, they performed, in one hand, univariate analyses with contingency tables: the statistical significance of the discrimination between pCR and non-pCR patients was assessed by Fisher's exact test. In the other hand, multivariate methods, such as logistic regression and ROC analyses, were performed to validate the independency of the molecular parameter signature as compared to classical clinical factors [age at diagnosis, hormone receptors, tumor grade, tumor size (pT), node status (pN)] (FIG. 22).

To determine the optimal molecular classifier in each cohort, inventors classified the genes from the highest to the lowest significant based on a non parametric Mann-Whitney test between pCR and non-pCR groups, and they proceed to a systematic approach by testing the discrimination potential of decreasing sets of genes (from n=43/53 to 3) (FIG. 23). The best prediction rules were obtained with a molecular parameter signature based on 3 genes (HOUSTON FEC LOOCV, p=0.0005; IGGO FEC LOOCV, p=0.002; IGGO TET LOOCV, p=0.43) (FIG. 23). In multivariate analyses using logistic regression, the “Calreticulin” molecular classifiers based on the 3 most significant genes of each cohort were retained as the sole independent prognostic factors for pCR, except for the cohort IGGO TET (negative control) (FIG. 24A). ROC analyses revealed the ability of the 3 genes based—“Calreticulin” molecular classifiers to discriminate significantly pCR patients from non-pCR patients, except for the cohort IGGO TET where the predictive value of the model was based only on the pT factor (FIG. 24B). In order to identify the best molecular classifier in common between the two anthracycline treated cohorts, they compared the most discriminant genes between these two cohorts. The classifier was constructed with the 3 candidate genes located in the grey areas (FIG. 25). Univariate analyses based on non-pCR vs pCR contingency tables and multivariate analyses revealed that the common classifier based on the CCR1, EIF2AK2 and DNAJC10 gene expressions (“CALR pathway” signature) was able to predict accurately the response of a human subject having a tumor to anthracyclines (FIG. 26).

Inventors then attempted to optimize the molecular classifier by integrating host genetic parameters, such as single nucleotide polymorphisms, in the algorithm. Multivariate analyses in HOUSTON FEC cohort revealed that the association of a MTHFR SNP (rs1801133) with the “CALR pathway” signature improved the prediction accuracy of the molecular classifier (FIG. 27). This MTHFR SNP was the most discriminant SNP between pCR and non pCR groups among a set of 384 selected SNPs located in immune candidate genes (Table 1). The interpretation of results revealed in particular that patients carrying the mutated allele of MTHFR SNP (rs1801133) associated with an over-expression of CCR1 and EIF2AK2 genes, and an under-expression of DNAJC10 gene, have higher chance to respond to anthracyclines than patients carrying the wild-type allele of MTHFR SNP associated with an under-expression of CCR1 and EIF2AK2 genes, and an over-expression of DNAJC10. These results demonstrate that tumour parameters, such as gene expression signatures, and host (the subject having a tumor) genetic parameters, such as SNPs, constitutes a powerful combination usable to predict or assess the response of a subject to a treatment of cancer, in particular to anthracyclines.

Material and Methods:

Cohort F. André (IGR/Houston) (Described in Lancet Oncol. Submitted).

Patients for gene expression analysis and metagene predictor validation have been selected from a database of 591 patients who received preoperative anthracyclines-based, taxanes-free chemotherapy at the Institut Gustave Roussy between 1987 and 2003. Inclusion criteria consisted of (1) pathologic complete response (pCR) defined as the absence of any invasive cancer or isolated tumor cells in the breast after completion of chemotherapy and (2) availability of frozen, pre-treatment samples in the institutional tumor bank for molecular analysis. Twenty six cases were identified and 26 additional cases were selected as controls. The controls included tumors that were resistant to chemotherapy defined as less than 75% clinical response and residual invasive disease (RD) present at the time of pathologic exam after chemotherapy, and were matched for Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)-expression. A further double-checking of clinical characteristics revealed that one patient with pCR actually received 2 cycles of docetaxel in addition to 4 courses of FEC (anthracyclines). This patient was retained in the analysis. The study was approved by the local IRB; all patients signed informed consent for tumor banking and future molecular analysis of their tissues.

Cohort R. Iggo/H. Bonnefoi (Bonnefoi et al, 2007) EORTC

Breast cancer patients treated in neoadjuvant (before any surgical step) FEC versus TET (anthracyclines versus taxanes) Data basis on tumor profiling (microarrays) described in Lancet Oncol 2007 and available online.

The microarray analyses, such as SVMs (Brown et al., 2000) and non parametric Mann-Whitney test, were performed with the MEV software version 4.5 (Saeed et al., 2006; Saeed et al., 2003). For multivariate logistic regression and ROC (Receiver operating characteristic) analyses, the SPSS 18.0 software was used. The Fisher's exact test was performed with the StatEL software (ad Science, France).

In clinical databases, when a category of an ordinal variable had too few observations in databases, these observations were pooled with a consecutive category (tumor size T1 and T2, node status N1 and N2 and grade 1 and 2). Missing values for grade, pN and SNPs were assigned to a separate category to avoid a decrease in the sample size in the logistic regression analysis.

Example 6 A Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism in Anyone of NLRP4, DDX58, CX3CR1, FAT2, MTHFR Genes Affects the Efficacy of Conventional Anti-Cancer Therapy in a Neoadjuvant Setting (Before Surgery) Breast Cancer Patients

The inventors observed that the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) A/T Gln925Leu (Q925L-rs302453—SEQ ID NO:60) in NLRP4 gene (NCBI Gene Reference: NM_(—)134444.4)) affects the efficacy of conventional anti-cancer therapy in terms of pathological complete response (pCR) and metastasis free survival in a neoadjuvant setting in breast cancer patients (n=443 and n=441, respectively). Indeed, a meta-analysis combining the results of three studies revealed that the proportion of pathological complete responses was higher in NLRP4-rs302453 mutated group than in wild-type group of patients treated with anthracyclines (20.9% in patients carrying the NLRP4 Gln925Leu mutated allele versus 14.1% in patient with the normal allele; p=0.04 by Chi2 analysis) (FIG. 30A). This association was confirmed by multivariate analyses using logistic regression by taking into account the effects of classical clinical factors. The NLRP4-rs302453 factor appeared independently associated to pathological complete responses (adjusted P-value=0.006, OR=2.14, 95% CI [1.23-3.70]) (FIG. 30B). The meta-analysis combining the results of three survival studies based on univariate and multivariate approaches revealed that the NLRP4-rs302453 was associated with a lower frequency of metastasis in patients carrying the NLRP4 Gln925Leu mutated allele than in patient carrying the normal allele (Log Rank p=0.09, FIG. 31A; Cox model adjusted P-value=0.05, OR=0.69, 95% CI [0.48-1.01], FIG. 31B).

In other words, the NLRP4 Gln925Leu mutated allele (rs302453) decreases the probability of metastatic relapse in patients treated with anthracyclines.

Inventors also found that SNPs residing in DDX58/RIG-1 (cytosolic sensor for viral nucleic acids) (A/T—Asp508Glu, D580E—rs17217280—NCBI Gene Reference: NM_(—)014314.3—SEQ ID NO: 17), CX3CR1 (A/G—Thr280Met, T280M—rs3732378—NCBI Gene Reference: NM_(—)001171171.1—SEQ ID NO: 39), genes impact on the prediction in a multivariate Cox model (integrating proliferation index, HER2/HR status) (FIG. 32). Therefore, inventors propose to validate such predictors integrating factors of the host-tumor immune equilibrium (the CRT map pathway and the immune receptors) aimed at predicting therapeutic responses to anthracycline/taxane-based therapies in BC using simple nucleic acid probes on home made chip arrays that we should set up for routine use starting from a tumor biopsy at diagnosis (algorithm presented in FIG. 27).

The high performance signature found in the neoadjuvant paired cohort (FIG. 33A) was cross-validated in a second independent neoadjuvant BC cohort (REMAGUS II) containing >260 patients. The FIG. 33B shows the performance (accuracy and AUC) of signatures of varying length (number of SNPs) trained on the first paired cohort (called “Houston”) and tested on REMAGUS II. We observe that the optimal size of the signature is around 5 (instead of 2 for cross-validation estimation (FIG. 33A)), suggesting that a larger signature may bring additional information. The performance is better for HER2 neg HR+ samples than HER2+ (FIG. 33B and FIG. 33C).

These data indicate the power of at least 2 associated SNPs those encoding MTHFR(C/T—Ala222Val, A222V—rs1801133—NCBI Gene Reference: NM_(—)005957.4—SEQ ID NO:194) and FAT2 (C/T—Arg574Cys, R574C—rs1432862—SEQ ID NO:162; or T/C—Leu3514Ser, L3514S—rs2053028—SEQ ID NO:216; or G/A—Met3631Ile, M3631I—rs6650971—SEQ ID NO: 403—NCBI Gene Reference: NM_(—)001447.2), listed in Table 6 and the classical clinical factors to design an accurate model predictive of response to neoadjuvant, anthracycline-based therapy. The mutation of MTHFR and FAT2 brings a selective advantage to respond to therapy.

In addition, we corroborated the predictive value of DDX58 and FAT2 in a third independent cohort of neoadjuvant breast cancer (BC) as predictive factors of disease free survival (FIG. 33D).

TABLE 4 (RCH signature) Weigth (Intercept) −136.84 GREE 57.35 RH −16.87 HER2 −38.35 rs1801133 59.68 rs1432862 −37.37

Two highly significant SNPs in neoadjuvant (MTHFR: rs1801133 and FAT2: rs1432862) in a multivariate Cox model (integrating proliferation index and HR status).

Material and Methods

Clinical Study Design

The inventors retrospectively constructed patient database using data obtained from Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif and Centre George François Leclerc, Dijon (France). All patients provided written informed consent for enrollment in the study. Eligible patients had histologically confirmed sporadic breast cancer. All patients received an anthracycline-based chemotherapy before surgery (FEC+taxanes 6 cycles in neoadjuvant setting, HER2+ patients have been excluded). This study was based on the REMAGUS cohort (n=202—patients not treated with Herceptin), the Dijon cohort (n=251) and the Houston case-control cohort (n=58) matched for age, tumor grade and hormone receptors. The primary endpoints of the studies were the pathological complete response and the metastatic relapse. After generation of the patient database and collection of genomic DNA samples, genotyping and statistical analyses were performed in a blinded fashion. A total of 443 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Chi square test was used to compare the distribution of clinical characteristics across the two genotype groups. All analyses were carried out using SPSS software, version 16 (IBM SPSS Statistics, France).

Genotyping

DNA was isolated from frozen blood leukocytes from subjects. The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)11170747_(—)20 was used to genotype the NLRP4 (rs302453). The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)25963266_(—)10 was used to genotype the DDX58 (rs17217280). The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)5687_(—)1 was used to genotype the CX3CR1 (rs3732378). The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)1202883_(—)20 was used to genotype the MTHFR (rs1801133) The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)11159313_(—)1 was used to genotype the FAT2 (rs2053028). The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C25639416_(—)10 was used to genotype the FAT2 (rs6650971). The TAQMAN Genotyping assay ID: C_(—)8949947_(—)20 was used to genotype the FAT2 (rs1432862).

Briefly, 10 ng of genomic DNA was mixed with 5 μL of 2× TaqMan Genotyping Master Mix (Applied Biosystems) and 0.25 μL of 40× genotyping assay in a final volume of 10 μL. Temperature cycling and real time fluorescence measurement were done using an StepOnePlus System (Applied Biosystems). The genotypes were assigned to each subject, by comparing the signals from the two fluorescent probes, FAM and VIC, and calculating the −log(FAM/VIC) ratio for each data point with the StepOne software v2.0 (Applied Biosystems).

Cohort REMAGUS:

Breast cancer patients (n=202) treated in neoadjuvant (before any surgical step).

Cohort Dascier:

Paired study of 35 responders and 35 non responders, the pairing being made on all clinical prognostic factors for Breast Cancer (BC).

Example 7 Tumor Cells Undergoing Immunogenic Cell Death after Chemotherapy are Characterized by a Viral Gene Signature-Like

First Evidences

Gene microarray analyses have been performed on Tumor cells harvested from mice which have been treated by either PBS or Doxorubicin, 2 days before. About 30 gene expressions have been identified to increase up to 4 fold change upon doxorubicin treatment (Table 3). All these genes are involved in viral recognition and/or Interferon pathway and/or immune functions.

TABLE 3 Candidate genes list identified by Microarray analysis. Official Day 2 Fold symbol change Official name Common name Gene ID (Human) Gene ID (Mice) Rsad2 4.07 radical S-adenosyl methionine domain Viperin 91543 58185 containing 2 Cxcl10 3.27 3627 15945 Ccl4 3.15 6351 20303 Irf7 3.03 interferon regulatory factor 7 3665 54123 Il15 2.98 3600 16168 Ifit2 2.89 interferon-induced protein with IFIT-2, GARG- 3433 15958 tetratricopeptide repeats 2 39, IFI-54K Dhx58 2.87 RNA helicase LGP2, probable ATP- LGP2 79132 80861 dependent RNA helicase DHX58, RIG-I- SEQ ID NO: 528 SEQ ID NO: 529 like receptor Ifi205 2.61 interferon-inducible protein p205-A p205 226695 Trim30 2.54 tripartite motif-containing protein 30 Trim30A 20128 Cd274 2.31 PD-L1 Cd69 1.96 CD69 Ly6c1 1.94 Ly6C Cxcl1 1.93 Cxcl1 2919 14825 Ifnb1 1.87 Ifnb1 3456 15977 Ccl7 1.81 Ccl7 6354 20306 Ccl2 1.66 Ccl2 158105 20296 Ccl3 1.27 Ccl3 6348 20302 Tnfrsf9 1.42 4-1BB Irf3 1.05 Irf3 3661 54131 Oasl1 3.21 231655 Oas2 3.08 4939 246728 Mx2 2.53 4600 17858 Mx1 1.68 4599 17857 stat4 1.04 Mavs ND mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein MAVS, IPS-1, 57506 228607 CARDIFF Irf1 ND 3659 16362 Stat3 ND Ccl5 ND 6352 20304 Cxcl9 ND 4283 17329 Ly6g ND Cxcl2 ND 2920 20310 Tnf ND 7124 21926 Il12 ND 3592 16159 Ppia 5478 268373 Cd11c ND Cd11b ND

Then inventors confirm by Real Time PCR the data provided by micro-array analysis.

Results

We confirmed by RT-PCR that genes involved in viral recognition and in anti-viral immune responses are specifically up-regulated 2 days after doxorubicin treatment (FIG. 35). We confirmed that these genes are up-regulated day 2 after chemotherapy: Rsad2, Dhx58, Ifi205, Trim30, Mx1, Oas2, Mx2, Ifit2, Il15, Irf7, Ifnb1, Cxcl1, Cxcl10, Ccl2, Ccl3, Ccl4, Ccl7 and Il12a while Mavs, Irf3, Irf1 and Tnf were unchanged.

These genes are expressed majorly in CD45 negative fraction: Rasd2, Ifi205, Mx1, Ifnb1, Ifit2, Il15, Irf7, Cc14, Ccl7, Ccl3, Tnf, Il12a.

Both CD45+ and CD45− fractions contribute to Irf1, Irf3, Ccl2, Cxcl1, Cxcl10, Dhx58, Mavs expression.

Conclusion

Doxorubicin-induced Immunogenic Cell Death is characterized by a viral gene signature-like triggering. These genes probably highlight the crucial pathway that allows a reactivation and/or de novo generation of a potent anti-tumor immune response which is indispensable for therapeutic success. Thus, this viral gene signature like appears as a potent predictor for immunogenic tumor cell death and probably for the response to chemotherapy and therapeutic success.

Material and Method

Experimental Setting: (FIG. 34)

Tumor cells, Chemotherapy treatment.

0.8 Million of MCA 205 has been subcutaneously implanted to C57Bl6 mice. When tumors reached 36 to 42 mm² (about 7 days later), mice have been intratumorally treated by either PBS or Doxorubicin (Doxo) (2 mM, 500. (4 groups: PBS or Doxo Treated, Day 2 or Day 8 post treatment, 6 mice/group).

RNA Extraction, Reverse Transcription into cDNA and Quantitative RT-PCR Analysis of Gene Expression.

Tumor samples were freshly collected, briefly washed in RPMI1640 media (GIBCO). Tissue samples were cut to a maximum thickness in any one dimension of 0.5 cm, placed in 5 volumes of RNAlater® (SIGMA ALDRICH). Samples can be stored at room temperature if processed for RNA extraction on the same day or stored at 4° C. for less than 1 month. RNA extraction from each tumor (up to 30 mg/sample) was performed using RNeasy Mini Kit (QIAGEN) following the instructions.

RNA concentration and purity was tested by NanoDrop Spectrophotometers (Thermo Scientific).

Reverse transcription: mRNA (containing 2.5-5 μg RNA in 30 ul RNase and DNase free water) was incubated at 65° C. 10 min, then placed on ice for 2 min.

Add 20 μL1 of Master mix (dN6 (3 ng/μl), dNTP (1 mM), Buffer (1×), RNAsin (40 U) Superscript® III RT (200 U)) into the processed mRNA sample. Mix was incubated at 50° C. for 1 h and then inactivated at 75° C. for 15 min.

qRT-PCR.

cDNA of each sample was diluted at 1:3 with DNase free water. For each sample, 4 μl of primer and probe TAQMAN (2×), 10 μl of assay mix (20×), 5 μl diluted cDNA were added. qRT-PCR was performed (45 cycles with standard PCR program using StepOnePlus™ system (Applied Biosystems). PPIA was used as endogenous control gene to normalize gene expression for data analysis.

Example 8 Anti-Calreticulin Antibody Response is a Predictive and Prognostic Factor for the Clinical Response to Anthracyclines and Metastasis-Free Survival in Breast Cancer Patients

Material and Methods

IgA and IgG anti-calreticulin antibody levels before and after chemotherapy by anthracyclines were analyzed in 107 sera from a cohort of neo-adjuvant breast cancer patients. Each value represents the arithmetical average of 4 different assays. Two different dilutions of sera were used: 1/20 and 1/100 in case of IgA antibodies and 1/100 and 1/500 in case of IgG anti-calreticulin antibodies. Each serum sample and standard serum were analysed in triplicate. The highest optical density (OD) of negative controls was subtracted from the mean of OD measured.

The mixture of the sera of patients (suffering from active celiac disease, refractory celiac sprue, autoimmune hepatitis type I, primary hepatocellular carcinoma, pancreatic adenocarcinoma and gall-bladder adenocarcinoma) with various seropositivity for anti-calreticulin antibodies was used as a standard. There were differences among antigenic epitopes of CRT recognized by IgA and IgG antibodies (previously tested by Pepscan) in these serum samples.

Determination of serum levels of antibodies against calreticulin: An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for testing the serum levels of IgA and IgG anti-calreticulin antibodies was performed as described in previous studies [Sanchez et al., 2008, 2003]. Briefly, human recombinant calreticulin used in a final concentration of 5 mg/ml of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) was coated on 96-well polystyrene plates (Gama, Czech Republic) overnight at 4° C. Blocking buffer [1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in PBS; Sigma, Germany] was used as a negative control. Each serum sample and standard serum were diluted in blocking buffer.

Serum levels of anti-calreticulin antibodies were expressed as arbitrary units (AU), the optical density of an internal standard serum being used as reference (i.e. taken as 100%). The cut-off value for anti-calreticulin antibodies was calculated as the mean value plus two standard deviations from the data pool of the 75 control sera samples. Cut-off values—calculated as the mean value plus two standard deviations from the data pool of the 75 control sera samples—are 60 AU for IgA anti-CRT antibodies and 90 AU for IgG anti-calreticulin antibodies. Values exceeding the cut-off were considered as positive. The non parametric Mann-Whitney U test was used for statistical analysis.

Results

The levels of anti-calreticulin antibodies in breast cancer cohort reach 47.7±23.8 (mean±standard deviation) for IgA and 83.8±40 AU for IgG isotope. The levels of anti-calreticulin antibodies in healthy volunteers group was 32.4±13.8 for IgA and 52.9±18.7 AU for IgG isotope (p<0.001) (FIG. 36).

The fractions of your sera for anti-calreticulin antibodies are: 27/107 vs 4/75 for IgA and 37/107 vs 7/75 for IgG antibodies in Breast Cancer patient vs Healthy volunteers, respectively (FIG. 37).

For 9 patients, inventors were able to study samples at diagnosis and after chemotherapy. Despite the few number of patients, it appears that a negative serology at the diagnosis and a sero-conversion during the treatment course are associated to a good prognosis.

For example the patient 6, who responded to the treatment and didn't relapse was seronegative at the diagnosis and then develop a humoral response against Calreticulin (FIG. 38, left panel). Conversely, the patient 4 who didn't respond to the treatment and relapsed was seronegative at the diagnosis and failed to acquire anti-Calreticulin antibody under chemotherapy. (FIG. 38, right panel).

Conclusion

The level of 1 g anti-Calreticulin at diagnosis and the dynamic acquisition of such antibody during the treatment course are directly correlated to the response to anthracycline chemotherapy and metastasis free survival in Breast Cancer patients.

Example 9 Autophagy is Required for the Immunogenicity of Cell Death and is Triggered by Anthracyclines and Oxaliplatine

The outcome of chemotherapy can be influenced by the host immune system at multiple levels. Inventors working hypothesis that chemotherapy can kill cancer cells in a way that they elicit an immune response is herein examined. They have accumulated data indicating that the history of pre mortem stress—including endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and autophagy—determines whether cell death is perceived by the immune system as immunogenic, causing the engulfment, processing and presentation of tumour antigens by antigen-presenting cells, followed by a cellular anticancer immune response that increases the efficacy of anticancer chemotherapies (Casares et al. JEM 2005, Obeid et al., Nat Med 2006, Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007, Ghiringhelli et al. Nat. Med. 2009, Zitvogel et al. Nat Rev Immunol 2008). Inventors found that ER stress can culminate in the translocation of an ER protein, calreticulin, to the cell surface where it serves as an engulfment signal for dendritic cells (DC).

Surrogate markers of an ongoing ER stress response can be studied in immunohistochemistry (IHC) using specific antibodies recognizing phosphorylated eif2alpha, calreticulin, ERp57, HMGB1 on initial breast cancer core biopsies (paraffin embedded tissues or frozen specimen). Typical stainings for phosphorylated eif2alpha and HMGB1 are showing in FIG. 39A. The staining of CRT is cytosolic, quoted positive or negative (intensity of staining is not important for the scoring), more than half of BC being negative at diagnosis. The staining of ERp57 is positive when ERp57 is at the plasma membrane (since most BC are positive, only ⅛ BC present with a relocation of cytosolic ERp57 to plasma membrane). The staining of HMGB1 should be inverted, meaning that the nuclei should become negative while the cytosol should become highly positive including those where there is a perinuclear re-enforcement of the staining Phosphorylated eif2a is a cytosolic staining which should be quite homogeneous and intense to be quoted positive (about ⅔ of specimen). Each IHC criteria counting for 1, the maximum score of a given tumor specimen is 4 while the minimal score is 0. In responders (patients whose tumor exhibits a pathological complete response post chemotherapy), ⅔ of tumors at diagnosis presented with a score >2 while in non responders, ⅓ of tumors at diagnosis presented with a score >2 (FIG. 39B).

Moreover, inventors unpublished data indicate that pre mortem autophagy is required for dying cells to release ATP, which acts on purinergic receptors to stimulate DC for optimal tumour antigen presentation. Thus, pre-apoptotic ER stress and autophagy determine the emission of immunogenic signals—CRT exposure and ATP secretion—as tumour cells die.

As a result, inventors herein identify the anticancer cytotoxic agents which are particularly efficient in inducing ER stress and autophagy, and demonstrate (i) that a mechanistic and perhaps hierarchical relationship between ER stress and autophagy exists, (ii) that cytotoxic agents inducing ER stress plus autophagy always induce immunogenic cell death in vivo, and (iii) that compensatory therapies can be developed to overcome defects in immunogenic cell death at the level of ER stress or autophagy.

Inventors also describe the analysis of clinical samples from patients with neoadjuvant treated breast cancers or adjuvant colorectal carcinoma (CRC), and determine the impact of ER stress and autophagy on chemotherapeutic responses or prognosis thereby validating their working hypothesis that ER stress and autophagy play a decisive role in eliciting anticancer immune responses and in improving the efficacy of antineoplastic therapies.

As mentioned above, CRT exposure and ATP release constitute obligatory immunogenic signals. Without CRT exposure or without ATP release, tumour cell death is detected as non-immunogenic. This means that chemotherapeutic agents that fail to induce CRT exposure or ATP release cannot induce immunogenic cell death. Moreover, tumour cells that have lost their capacity to expose CRT on the surface or to secrete ATP from tumours become refractory to therapy with normally immunogenic cell death inducers such as anthracyclines (Kepp, Cancer Met Rev, 2011, Martins I, Oncogene 2010, Martins I, Ann NY Acad Med 2010). Inventors report that CRT exposure critically relies on an ER stress response that is usually triggered by immunogenic cell death inducers such as anthracyclines. Accordingly, they found that the stable knockdown of PERK, a kinase involved in the ER stress response, abolished CRT exposure and the immunogenicity of anthracycline-induced cell death. In an attempt to restore this defect, they screened the IBBC library of bioactive compounds to identify agents that can restore CRT exposure. Inventors found that thapsigargin (example 3), an inhibitor of the SERCA pump and a prototypic ER stress inducer, was the sole agent (out of 450 compounds) to induce CRT exposure in the presence of cisplatin but not in the absence of cisplatin. Indeed, thapsigargin and another ER stressor, tunicamycin, could induce immunogenic cell death when combined with cisplatin, underscoring the importance of ER stress for the induction of immunogenic cell death (Martins I et al, Oncogene 2010).

Inventors unpublished data also indicate that macroautophagy (“autophagy”) is surprisingly required for ATP release. Intracellular ATP can be quantified with quinacrine, which accumulates in ATP-rich intracellular structures and then emits a green fluorescence, even after aldehyde fixation of the cells. This signal can be detected by fluorescence microscopy or flow cytometry. Only those chemotherapeutic agents that cause pre-lethal autophagy can induce ATP release, and autophagy-deficient tumour cells fail to release ATP after blockade of the autophagic pathway by knockdown of essential autophagy (Atg 5, 6, 7, 12) genes (FIG. 40). Inventors can visualize autophagy in chemotherapy treated mouse tumors in vivo using LC3-GFP engineered CT26 or MCA205 where microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 alpha (LC3) can be observed in frozen tissues in immunofluorescence (FIG. 41). Autophagy may be assessed using the following parameters: a mixture Ab targeting LC3 and gate 16/GABARAP members.

Importantly, such autophagy-deficient tumour cells fail to immunize against live tumour cells when they are treated with anthracylines in vitro and injected subcutaneously into immunocompetent mice, in conditions in which normal (autophagy-competent) dying tumour cells are immunogenic (FIG. 42). This defect in immunogenicity can be restored by elevating the extracellular ATP concentration, namely by co-injection of the ecto-ATPase (apyrase) inhibitor ARL67156 (FIG. 43).

Moreover, autophagy-deficient tumours which have been established for 8 days (implanted in mice eight days before injection of chemotherapy) fail to respond to anthracycline-based chemotherapy in vivo, and this defect is again overcome by intratumoural injections of ARL67156 (FIG. 44).

These data underscore the importance of ER stress and autophagy for rendering cell death immunogenic and hence for enhancing anticancer immune responses in vivo. A preliminary screen on 2000 anticancer agents indicates that only a minority can induce both autophagy and ER stress, suggesting that only a few are endowed with the capacity to induce immunogenic cell death.

Material and Methods

FIG. 38. The Core Machinery of Autophagy is Indispensable for ATP Release During Exposure with Immunogenic Chemotherapies.

FIG. 38 upper panel. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) genetically modified by small interfering RNA blocking the expression of ATG5 have been exposed ex vivo for 48 hours with increasing dosing of oxaliplatin (OX) or mitoxanthrone (an anthracycline, MX). The percentages of Quinacrine negative cells, assessed by immunofluorescence (GFP emission) represent the proportions of cells that have lost intracellular ATP. The positive control for autophagy induction is starvation.

FIG. 38 lower panel. Mouse colon cancer CT26 have been knock down for the expression of several family members of the core machinery of autophagy (by means of small interfering RNA, two different specific siRNA for ATG5, 6 or 7 and control siRNA (siSC)) and then subjected to ex vivo exposure with mitoxanthrone (MX) or control saline (CT). ATP release is indirectly measured by the percentages of cancer cells that have lost quinacrine expression.

FIG. 39. Induction of Autophagy In Vivo Following Chemotherapy of Established Tumors.

After 8 days of tumor implantation (CT26 mouse colon cancer genetically modified to overexpress LC3-GFP in BALB/c immunocompetent mice), oxaliplatin or mitoxanthrone was inoculated systemically (i.v.). Tumors were withdrawn at 48 hours post-therapy and immunofluorescence stainings were performed on frozen sections of tumor tissues to visualize nuclei (in Hoechst blue), and autophagosomes in green (LC3-GFP). Redistribution of LC3-GFP in autophagosomes can be visualized post-therapy with both cytotoxic agents (mitoxanthrone MTX and oxaliplatin) as shown in representative micrograph pictures (upper panels). The lower panel is a graph summarizing enumeration of autophagosomes positive cells in 10 independent sections per tumor and animal (each dot represents one tumor). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 40. Prophylactic Immunization with Dying Tumor Cells is Impaired when Dying Cells are Autophagy-Deficient.

One million CT26 knock down with small interfering RNA specific for ATG5, ATG6 (Beclin 1 BCN1), or ATG7 or controls siCO were treated with the anthracyclin mitoxanthrone (MTX) for 18 hours, washed and inoculated in one flank of a naïve animal (BALB/C mouse). Positive controls are CT26 treated with MTX and negative controls are CT26 treated with PBS. Ten days later, mice were rechallenged with 3× the minimal tumorigenic dose of live CT26 cells on the opposite flank and monitoring of tumor growth was recorded with a caliper (product of perpendicular diameters). The % of tumor free animals are shown in the graph and the number of animals per group is indicated (n=20). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 41. Compensatory Therapy for Autophagy Deficient Cells: Apyrase Inhibitors Restore the Immunogenicity of Autophagy-Deficient Dying Tumor Cells.

Idem as in FIG. 40 but the dying cells (siCO or siATG7) were admixed (or not) with apyrase inhibitors (AI) (apyrases are enzymes hydrolyzing ATP in the extracellular milieu) and/or suramine (SUR) or oxidized ATP (OXY), both inhibitors of purinergic receptors at the conventional dosing (previously reported). The % of tumor free animals are shown in the graph and the number of animals per group is indicated (n=20). Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

FIG. 42. Autophagy-Deficient Tumors Failed to Properly Respond to Chemotherapy Unless Apyrase Inhibitors are Coadministered Along with Chemotherapy.

One million CT26 knock down with small interfering RNA specific for ATG5 or ATG7 or controls WT were treated with the anthracyclin mitoxanthrone (MTX) at 8 days post-implantation in one flank of a naïve animal (BALB/C mouse). The lower graphs indicate that the growth of ATG5 and ATG7 deficient tumors are not controlled by MTX therapy in contrast to CT26 WT which significantly respond to anthracyclines. However, the upper graphs show that when apyrase inhibitors (AI) are co-administered locally in tumor beds along with chemotherapy (i.v. inoculated), tumors start to regress with the cytotoxic agent. Monitoring of tumor growth was recorded with a caliper (product of perpendicular diameters) and is depicted for 5 mice/group. Statistical analyses were performed with Anova test (Fisher's exact method) with significant results at p<0.05.

Example 10 Compensatory Therapy using TLR4 and 4-1BB Agonists

Material and Method

TLR4Agonist:

MCA205 or EL4 tumor cell lines were subcutaneously implanted to C57Bl6 mice. Seven days later, MCA 205 or EL4 tumor bearing mice were treated by either PBS or chemotherapy (Doxorubicin intra tumoral (i.t.) or Oxaliplatin intra peritoneal (i.p.) respectively). At day 3 and 5 post chemotherapy, some mice were treated i.t with 2 μg of Dendrophilin, a TLR4 agonist.

4-1BB Agonist:

MCA205 or EL4 tumor cell lines were subcutaneously implanted to C57Bl6 mice. Seven days later, MCA 205 or EL4 tumor bearing mice were treated by with either PBS or chemotherapy (Doxorubicin i.t. or Oxaliplatin i.p respectively).

At day 3, 6 and 9 post chemotherapy, some mice were treated i.p. with 100 μg of 4-1BB agonist.

Results

PBS treated mice cannot control the tumor growth whereas chemotherapy-treated mice are able to do so. Dendrophilin combined with Chemotherapy increases the control of the tumor growth, meaning that TLR4 agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatin in 2 tumor models (FIG. 45)

PBS treated mice cannot control the tumor growth whereas chemotherapy-treated mice are able to do so. 4-1BB agonist combined with Chemotherapy increases the control of the tumor growth, meaning that 4-1BB agonists potentiate the immunogenicity of anthracyclines and oxaliplatin in 2 tumor models (FIG. 46).

Example 11 Defective Immunogenic Cell Death of HMGB1-Deficient Tumors: Compensatory Therapy with TLR4 Agonists

Inventors have described the concept of “immunogenic cell death” (ICD) in cancer as a modality of cell demise triggered by a minority of cytotoxic agents that ultimately elicits an antitumor-specific T cell immunity (Kroemer G et al.; Immunogenic Cell death in Cancer Therapy. 2013). They further searched for the molecular links between tumor cell death, stimulation of pathogen recognition receptors, and natural or adaptive immunity. Preclinical data revealed that dying tumor cells can emit a series of danger signals (so called “cell death associated molecular patterns” (CDAMPs) that dictate the recruitment and activation of specific myeloid immune effectors, hence triggering the first line of the innate response (Zitvogel et al.; Cell 2010). Such CDAMPs include metabolic alterations (extrusion of ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) into the extracellular space), alterations of the cell surface (such as the exposure of calreticulin on the plasma membrane (Obeid, 2007), and changes in the pericellular microenvironment (such as the nuclear and cellular exodus of the chromatin-binding protein, high-mobility group box-1, HMGB1) (Apetoh, 2007) that ultimately ignite an anticancer immune response. Such an immune response involves a complex hierarchy of immune effectors including monocyte-derived dendritic cells producing interleukin-1β, γ/δ T cells producing interleukin-17 and conventional CD8⁺ α/β T cells producing interferon-γ (Ma Y et al.; J. Exp. Med. 2011; and Ma Y et al, Immunity In press).

Although toll-like receptors (TLRs) were originally described to detect microbial products only, endogenous danger signals from dying cells can bind TLRs as well and hence modulate adaptive immune responses. The systematic screening for a role of TLRs in the efficacy of chemotherapy or radiotherapy led inventors to unveil the elective contribution of TLR4 in these antitumor effects (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007). TLR4 present on the surface of dendritic cells (DCs) recognizes its endogenous ligand high mobility group B1 (HMGB1), which is released from dying tumor cells, and this ignites a Myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (MyD88)-dependent signaling pathway essential for the perception of ICD. The TLR4/MyD88 pathway elicited by HMGB1 inhibits the fusion between phagosomes and lysosomes, thereby facilitating tumor antigen processing, which is required for the induction of re-stimulation of cellular immune responses against cancer cells (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007). Hence, the immunogenicity of tumor cells exposed to anthracyclines is lost in mice presenting with genetic defects in TLR4 (such as the natural C57C3H tlr4 mutation or knock out of the tlr4 gene induced by homologous recombination) or its downstream mediator MyD88. Conversely, adoptive transfer of TLR4-expressing DC loaded with dying tumor cells into tlr4^(−/−) mice, restored the defective immune response, underscoring the crucial role of host antigen presenting cells harbouring a functional TLR4/MyD88 pathway for the recognition of ICD. The expression of TLR4 and MyD88 by the host immune system is essential for the control of established transplantable tumors including CT26 colorectal cancers, EG7 lymphomas, TS/A mammary carcinomas and GOS osteosarcomas by anthracyclines, oxaliplatin or radiotherapy (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007 and Apetoh et al. Immunol Rev 2007).

The clinical relevance of the TLR4 pathway for the success of anticancer therapies has been analyzed in several retrospective studies in early breast cancers (Apetoh et al.; Nat Med 2007), in metastatic colon cancers (Tesniere A et al; Oncogen 2010) and in advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma (Vacchelli E et al.; Oncoimmunology 2012). A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs4986790 affecting the tlr4 gene has been associated with decreased responses to the exogenous TLR4 ligand, bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This single nucleotide substitution (+896A/G) in the tlr4 gene found in 12-15% of Caucasians leads to the replacement of an aspartic acid by a glycine residue (Asp299Gly) in the extracellular domain of TLR4. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that the variant form of TLR4 bound recombinant HMGB1 protein less efficiently than did unmutated TLR4 (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007). Moreover, although monocyte-derived DCs from individuals bearing the normal allele of TLR4 could cross-present antigens from dying melanoma cells to T cells in an HMGB1-dependent manner, DCs from individuals bearing the TLR4Asp299Gly mutation failed to do so (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007). Hence, the interaction between HMGB1 released by dying tumor cells and TLR4 present on DCs dictates the cross-presentation of tumor antigens to T cells and the priming of tumor-specific Tc1/Th1-cell responses mandatory for the success of anticancer therapies (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007). Both in breast cancer and colon cancer, individuals bearing one or two alleles of the rs4986790 SNP exhibited accelerated relapse after adjuvant chemotherapy with anthracyclines and oxaliplatin, respectively (Apetoh et al. Nat Med 2007; and Tesniere A et al; Oncogen 2010.

HMGB1 plays the role of an “alarmin” or danger-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) capable of recruiting and activating inflammatory phagocytes and eliciting adaptive immunity Inside the cell, HMGB1 is ubiquitously present in the nucleus of most mammalian cells, in which it stabilizes nucleosomes and regulates gene transcription by promoting the access of transcriptional factors to the DNA. Although HMGB1 may stimulate tumor progression, metastasis and neoangiogenesis, HMGB1 expression was found downregulated in lung neoplasia and breast cancer (our unpublished data). In such cases, chemotherapy-induced ICD could be severely compromised, pointing to the need of supplying artificial TLR4 ligands to restore chemosensitivity. Here, inventors demonstrate that dendrophilin, a chemically defined TLR4 agonist, markedly synergizes with anthracyclines or oxaliplatin and corrects the deficient immunogenicity of HMGB1-deficient tumors. These findings open novel therapeutic avenues to improve the efficacy of cytotoxic compounds endowed with immunogenic potential and broaden the indications of TLR4 agonists in cancer.

Material and Method

Mouse Strains.

All animals were bred and maintained according to both the FELASA and the Animal Experimental Ethics Committee Guidelines (Val de Marne, France). WT SPF C57BL/6J and BALB/c mice were obtained from Harlan or Janvier, and Myd88^(−/−) and trif^(−/−) C57BL/6J mice were provided by B. Ryffel (CNRS, France) and were maintained in controlled, pathogen-free conditions at the Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR, Villejuif, France) and used at between 7 and 18 weeks of age.

Reagents and Materials.

Cell death was induced either with Doxorubicin (Sigma Aldrich) or Oxaliplatin (Sanofi-Aventis, France). LPS (L4005) was obtained from Sigma Aldrich. Anti-mouse antibodies for CD3ε (145-2C11), CD4 (GK1.5), CD8α (53-6.7), CD11b (M1/70), CD16/32 (2.4G2), CD45.2 (104), Ly6c (AL-21), Ly6g (RG6-8C5), IFN-γ (XMG1.2), IL-17 (eBio17B7) were obtained from BD Bioscience, BioLegend and eBioscience. LIVE/DEAD fixable yellow stain fluorescence for viability staining was purchased from Invitrogen/Molecular Probes. Cell acquisition and analysis have been performed on a Cyan (Beckman Coulter) flow cytometer with FloJo (Tree Star) software.

Synthetic TLR4 Agonists.

DENDROPHILIN (DEN) S and A (provided by Innaxon, Tewkesbury, UK) have been isolated according to an optimized and standardized, proprietary protocol, based upon the methods described by Galanos, Westphal and Luderitz (Galanos C et al.; J Chromatogr 1988; Eur J Biochem 1975; 1969; Zentralbl Bakteriol Orig A 1979), which involves optimized fermentation conditions and multi-step purification steps and subsequent electrodialysis in order to separate cations and basic amines, which impact on the physio-chemical properties and corresponding biological properties, such as complement activation, binding to serum proteins, in vivo distribution, toxicity and anti-tumor activity. A broad level of analytical methods assured the complete removal of macromolecular contaminants, such as proteins, nucleic acids, and sugar polymers (Freudenberg et al., Infection 1989; Galanos et al., Eur J Biochem 1971; Komuro T et al; FEMS Mocribiol Lett 1989; Schlecht S et al., Zentralbl Bakteriol 1992; Yin E T et al., Biochim Biophys Acta 1972) with the exclusive binding to TLR4 confirmed in primary TLR4 wild-type and deficient mouse macrophage cell lines. DEN S is a standardized formulation of S-type LPS, whereas DEN A represents an R-type LPS, both in a highly water soluble preparation as a uniform salt with a constant sediment coefficient. Any trace lipo-proteins bound to the LPS molecule have been removed. In contrast certain chemical modifications of the core and Lipid A moiety only found in natural LPS, selected for maximal potency to elicit an anti-tumor immunity in rodent models and in humans have been preserved (Bartholeyns J et al., Infect Immun 1987; Chokri M et al., Anticancer Res 1989; Engelhardt R et al., Cancer Res 1991; Engelhardt R et al., Prog Clin Biol Res 1995; Freudenberg N et al. 1984; Rietschel E T et al., Eur J Biochem 1971; Strittmatter W et al., Microb Pathog 1987; Vedder H et al., Inflamm Res 1999).

Transplantable Tumor Cell Lines.

CT26 colon cancer cells (syngenic from BALB/c mice), EL4 thymoma cells (syngenic from C57BL/6 mice), and MCA205 fibrosarcoma cells (syngenic from C57BL/6 mice) were cultured at 37° C. under 5% CO₂ in RPMI 1640 containing 10% FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 IU/ml penicillin/streptomycin, 1 mM sodium pyruvate and MEM non-essential amino acids (Invitrogen).

Chemotherapy and Dendrophilin Treatment of Established Tumors in Mice.

WT or loss-of-function mice were injected in the right flank with 1×10⁶ of EL4 or CT26 or MCA205 cells. Mice were then randomly assigned into treatment groups of 4-6 mice each. When tumor size reached 35-50 mm², mice were treated with oxaliplatin (5 mg per kg body weight i.p for EL4), doxorubicin (2 μM injected intratumorally in 100 μl PBS, for CT26 and MCA205). Two and/or four days after chemo treatment, mice were treated with Dendrophilin or LPS (2 μg in 100 μl NaCl per mouse i.v or i.t). In some experiments, MCA205 tumor bearing mice received doxorubicin and dendrophilin every 12 days after first treatment. Tumor growths were monitored every 3-4 days using a caliper.

Immunoblot Analysis.

For immunoblot analysis, cells were washed in cold PBS and lysed in sample buffer containing 1% vol/vol NP40, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.9), 10 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM PMSF, 1% vol/vol glycerol, and protease and phosphatase inhibitors. Inventors separated 15 mg proteins on 10% SDS-PAGE gels and electrotransferred them to nitrocellulose membranes (iBlot Western Detection Kit, Invitrogen). After blocking with 3% wt/vol BSA and 0.1% vol/vol Tween 20, they used primary antibodies for HMGB1 and GAPDH. Finally, bound antibodies were detected. with the appropriate horseradish peroxidase-labeled secondary antibodies and ECL Plus detection system.

RNA Interference Knockdown of HMGB1.

Inventors transfected MCA205 cells using Lipofectamine RNAiMAX (Invitrogen) with either PBS, irrelevant siRNA (CUUACGCUGAGUACUUCGA TT) (SEQ ID NO: 530), HMGB1 siRNA 1 (GCAGCCCUAUGAGAAGAAA TT) (SEQ ID NO: 531) or HMGB1 siRNA 2 (GCUGAAAAGAGCAAGAAAA TT) (SEQ ID NO: 532). The depletion of HMGB1 was assessed 48 h after each transfection by immunoblot analysis as described above.

Anticancer Vaccination.

MCA205 cells or transfected with HMGB1 siRNA or irrelevant siRNA cells were cultured in vitro in presence of doxorubicin (1 μM) for 24 h. siRNA transfected cells were treated with doxorubicin post 48 h transfection. 1×10⁶ dying cells were injected subcutaneously into the right footpad of mice. Ten days later, mice were re-challenged in the right flank with 5×10⁵ live MCA205 cells. Tumor growth was monitored every 2-5 days using caliper.

Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes Analysis.

At indicated time points, tumors were harvested, cut into small pieces and digested in Liberase™ (Roche) and DNase I (Calbiochem) for 30 min at 37° C. Single-cell suspension was obtained by crushing the digested tissue with a syringe plunger and filtering through a 100 μm cell strainer. For intracellular, cells were incubated for 4 hours at 37° C. with 50 ng/ml of PMA, 1 μg/ml of ionomycin and BD Golgi STO. After membrane staining, cells were stained with anti-IL-17, IFNγ using BD Cytofix/Cytoperm Kit, accordingly to manufacturer's instructions.

HMGB1 Immunostaining.

MCA205 and siRNA transfected cells were fixed with Formol/Eosine and embedded in paraffin. Five μm thick tissue sections were obtained with a microtom (MEDITE) and adhered to poly-L-lysine-coated slides, deparaffinized and hydrated through graded alcohols to water. Sections were pre-treated with citrate buffer (DiaPath), pH 6, for 20 minutes in a 98° C. water bath. Endogenous peroxidase activity was inhibited with 3% hydrogen peroxidase (DAKO) for 10 minutes. Sections were then saturated 20 min with Protein Block Serum Free (DAKO). Without washing, the primary antibody, a polyclonal rabbit anti HMGB1 antibody (ThermoScientist Pierce), was incubated overnight, followed by the secondary Ab, (En vision-Rabbit, Dako) for 30 minutes, and the streptavidin-HRP was incubated for an additional 30 minutes. Peroxidases were detected with Diaminobenzidine substrate (DAB, Dako), and the sections were counterstained with Mayer's hematoxylin.

Neutrophil Depletion In Vivo.

For neutrophils depletion, tumor bearing mice received 200 μg anti-Ly6G antibody (1A8, Bioxcell) every 2 days from day 3 before chemotherapy treatment till 5 days after treatment. Depletion was checked in blood and tumor from antibody administrated mice.

Statistical Analyses.

Unless otherwise indicated, results are expressed as mean±SEM. All experiments were repeated at least twice, yielding similar results. Normal distributions were compared by unpaired, two-tailed Student's t tests. Statistical analyses were performed by means of the software Prism 5 (GraphPad, San Diego, Calif., USA) or Excel 2010 (Microsoft, Rockville, Md., USA). p values<0.05 were considered as statistically significant.

Results

Deficiency in the Nuclear Expression of HMGB1 in Two Transplantable Tumor Models

HMGB1 expression was determined in paraffin-embedded CT26 colon carcinoma and MCA205 sarcoma tumors by immunohistochemistry using a specific anti-HMGB1 antibody (Ladoire S et al. ARS submitted). This approach yielded a strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in cells that were cultured in vitro, pelleted and paraffin-embedded (FIG. 47A). While all CT26 and MCA205 tumor cells stained positively after in vitro culture, a large fraction of them became negative after in vivo passage in immunocompetent BALB/c and C57Bl6 mice, respectively (FIG. 47A). Surrounding cells of the tumor stroma, exhibited a nuclear HMGB1 staining (not shown) as an internal control, pointing to differences between normal and cancer cells that arise in vivo. Of note, MCA205 fibrosarcomas almost completely lost nuclear HMGB1 expression (FIGS. 47A-B), while CT26 carcinomas conserved nuclear HMGB1 in ˜40% of malignant cells (FIGS. 47A-B). This staining was strongly reduced upon transfection with a siRNA targeting HMGB1, confirming the specificity of the immunohistochemical method (FIGS. 47C-D). Inventors confirmed the relative and progressive loss of nuclear HMGB1 in human breast cancers by investigating the nuclear staining using the specific anti-HMGB 1 Ab (FIG. 47E). Out of 232 early BC treated by surgery, adjuvant anthracyclines and radiotherapy (+/−Tamoxifene in hormone receptor positive cancers), the loss of a nuclear staining was observed more frequently in large rather than small tumors (FIG. 1F; 70% for pT0, T1 versus 56% for >pT2, p=0.042).

Hence, in both mouse sarcoma and colon carcinoma and human breast cancer (BC), a progressive loss of nuclear HMGB1 localization is gradually observed with tumor development.

Synergy Between a TLR4 Agonist and Immunogenic Cytotoxic Agents.

Since HMGB1 is an endogenous TLR4 agonist, inventors investigated whether external supply of synthetic TLR4 agonists might be used as an adjunct therapy of tumors expressing low HMGB1 levels. Since HMGB1 is normally released by dying cells at late time points (at least in vitro), they inoculated a TLR4 agonist called “dendrophilin” (DEN S) intravenously shortly after the initiation of chemotherapy. Dendrophilin manufactured as described in the Materials and Methods (Galanos C et al.; J Chromatogr 1988; Eur J Biochem 1975; 1969; Zentralbl Bakteriol Orig A 1979) is a standardized formulation of S-type LPS (Huber M et al., Eur J Immunol 2006, Jiang Z et al., Nat Immunol 2005; Poltorak A et al., Science 1998), which is an LPS derivative devoid of any trace of lipoproteins that conserves chemical modifications of the core and lipid A moieties required for optimal immunostimulatory properties and anti-tumor effects in rodent models and humans (Bartholeyns J et al., Infect Immun 1987; Chokri M et al., Anticancer Res 1989; Engelhardt R et al., Cancer Res 1991; Engelhardt R et al., Prog Clin Biol Res 1995; Freudenberg N et al. 1984; Rietschel E T et al., Eur J Biochem 1971; Strittmatter W et al., Microb Pathog 1987; Vedder H et al., Inflamm Res 1999). DEN S was inoculated two and four days post-chemotherapy with oxaliplatin or doxorubicin (FIG. 48A). This combined chemoimmunotherapeutic regimen yielded statistically significant synergistic effects against EL4 lymphomas (FIG. 48B), MCA205 fibrosarcomas (FIG. 48C, left panel) and a trend towards additive effects in CT26 carcinomas (FIG. 48C, right panel). Thus, in EL4 and MCA205 tumors, chemotherapy with oxaliplatin and doxorubicin, respectively, had only mild effects that were exacerbated by co-treatment with DEN S, while DEN-S on its own had no or little effects, respectively (FIGS. 48B,C). Continuous chemoimmunotherapy of MCA205 fibrosarcomas with doxorubicin and DEN S in four consecutive cycles every other 12 days (FIG. 50A) achieved improved antitumor effects (FIG. 50B) and conferred an increased long-term survival, eventually curing 20% animals (FIG. 50C). Two routes of administration of DEN S, systemic intravenous injection versus local intratumoral inoculation, both performed at day 2 and day 4 post-chemotherapy, achieved similar antitumor effects (FIGS. 47 G, H). A single inoculation of DEN at day 2 post-anthracyclines was sufficient for the chemoimmunotherapy regimen to exhibit significant synergy (FIG. 49).

Next, inventors evaluated the capacity of various TLR4 agonists to achieve a synergistic interaction with oxaliplatin (in EL4 thymoma, FIGS. 51A, C) or doxorubicin (in MCA205, FIGS. 51B-C). Escherichia coli-derived LPS, which reportedly transduces a combined Myd88- and TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon-β (TRIF)-dependent signal (Fitzgerald K A et al., J exp Med 2003; Kawai T et al, Immunity 1999), did not mediate significant effects in conjunction with chemotherapy (FIGS. 52A-B). In contrast, DEN S or DEN A both markedly synergized with either of the two cytotoxic agents (FIGS. 51B-C). Whereas DEN S is a standardized formulation of S-type LPS, DEN A represents an R-type LPS. Both DEN S and DEN A weakly stimulated IL-6 release from murine cancer cell lines, yet failed to influence the growth of the cells in vitro (not shown).

Altogether, these data demonstrate that the antitumor efficacy of chemotherapy can be greatly enhanced by chemically defined TLR4 agonists in various transplantable tumors expressing low levels of HMGB1.

Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of the Chemo-Immunotherapy

The synergistic antitumor effects of dendrophilin plus chemotherapy observed by inventors on tumors implanted on immunocompetent wild type mice (FIGS. 48, 50, 51) was maintained in knockout mice lacking the TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon-β (TRIF) (FIG. 52A) indicating that TRIF was dispensable for signal transduction downstream of TLR4 in the host immune system. In sharp contrast, chemoimmunotherapy lost its efficacy on tumors implanted in mice lacking myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) (FIG. 52B). Therefore, MyD88-dependent signalling appears to be required for the antitumor effects of dendrophilin.

Inventors next analysed the phenotype of tumor-infiltrating leukocytes at days 7 to 10 post-single or combination therapy. Chemoimmunotherapy markedly enhanced the intratumoral abundance of CD45⁺ leukocytes (FIG. 53A). Myeloid cells (CD45⁺CD11b⁺ cells) (FIGS. 53B-C) decreased in favour of CD3⁺ T lymphocytes (FIG. 53C), in particular interferon γ (IFNγ)-producing CD8⁺ Tc1 cells and IFNγ-producing CD4⁺ Th1 cells (FIG. 53D), which increased at the expense of. Interestingly, DEN S promoted the recruitment and/or the intratumoral differentiation of neutrophil granulocytes (Lin-CD11b⁺Ly6C^(low), Ly6G⁺ cells, FIG. 53C). However, the antibody-mediated depletion of Ly6G⁺ failed to abolish the efficacy of the chemoimmunotherapy, excluding the contribution of neutrophils to the anticancer effects of dendrophilin (not shown).

Altogether the present data indicate that the synergistic antitumor effects achieved by the combination of DEN A or S plus chemotherapy with anthracyclines or oxaliplatin are mediated through the accumulation of intratumoral IFNγ-producing effector T lymphocytes.

Re-Establishment of the Immunogenicity of HMGB1-Deficient Tumors by Dendrophilin.

The standard assay for assessing the immunogenicity of cell death consists in exposing tumor cells in vitro to apoptosis inducers, followed by their subcutaneous injection into histocompatible immunocompetent mice, as 70±10% of the cells stain positively with annexin V-FITC and the vital dye propidium iodine. Eight to 10 days later, the mice are injected with live tumor cells into the opposite flank and tumor growth is monitored. The absence of tumor development then is interpreted as a sign of an anticancer immune response elicited by the vaccine.^(1, 6, 45) Depletion of HMGB1 from MCA205 cells with a specific siRNA validated by immunohistochemistry (FIG. 47C) or immunoblot analyses (FIG. 47D) reduced their immunogenicity. This was found in experiments in which MCA205 cells expressing or lacking HMGB1 were exposed to doxorubicin in vitro, washed, resuspended in PBS alone or PBS plus DEN S and inoculated subcutaneously to immunize naive animals. Ten days later, all mice were rechallenged with a lethal dose of non-transfected MCA205. Then, tumor growth was monitored every three days (FIGS. 54A-E) revealing that the vaccine consisting in doxorubicin-treated, HMGB1-expressing cells (that were either non-transfected of transfected with a scrambled control siRNA) was efficient in reducing tumor progression with or without addition of exogenous DEN S (FIG. 54E). In sharp contrast, immunization with doxorubin-treated MCA205 depleted from HMGB1 failed to protect mice against the rechallenge, except if the vaccine was combined with DEN S (FIG. 54E). These results demonstrate that, in the context of deficient ICD, DEN S can compensate for deficient HMGB1 expression.

Discussion

The foundations of cancer immunotherapy have been laid in the late 19^(th) century when Coley observed that poorly defined bacterial extracts could induce the regression of bone sarcomas. Subsequent work demonstrated the capacity of bacterial compounds to elicit innate and cognate antitumor immune responses (Galluzzi L et al., Oncoimmunology 2012). Here inventors show, in three distinct transplantable tumor models, that treatment with several conventional cytotoxic agents including doxorubicin and oxaliplatin, which both induce ICD, markedly benefit from the adjunction of an exogenous TLR4 agonist, allowing to improve long term survival in preclinical models (FIGS. 48, 50, 51). These synergistic antitumor effects led to the intratumoral accumulation of IFNγ-producing CD4⁺ and CD8⁺ T cells (FIG. 53), supporting that they involve the same anticancer immune effectors as those that have previously been involved in the anticancer immune response elicited by doxorubicin and oxaliplatin alone (Apetoh L et al., Nat Med 2007; Ma Y et al., J Exp Med 2011). Inventors also found that dying cancer cells lacking HMGB1 were unable to induce an anticancer immune response after chemotherapy unless they were combined with a chemically defined TLR4 agonist, dendrophilin (FIG. 54).

In this work, inventors administered various TLR4 agonists (such as E. coli LPS and the dendrophilins DEN S and DEN A) and found that LPS, which elicits TLR4 signaling through pathways involving both MyD88 and TRIF failed to ameliorate the therapeutic efficacy of oxaliplatine or doxorubicin (FIGS. 52A-B). Previously, they reported that host-derived TRIF is dispensable for the immune-dependent growth inhibition of transplantable tumors treated with anthracyclines or irradiation, while both TLR4 and MyD88 are absolutely required for the therapeutic effects of such anticancer agents (Apetoh L et al., Nat Med 2007). In fact, TLR9 ligands (CpG oligodeoxyribonucleotides), which are capable of inducing MyD88-dependent signals, could restore chemosensitivity in TLR4-deficient mice (Apetoh L et al., Immunol Rev 2007). As a possibility, LPS may be less efficient than dendrophilin because the former elicits both stimulatory and inhibitory immune effects (presumably via MyD88 and TRIF, respectively), while the latter would have a tendency to induce a purely immunostimulatory phenotype (via MyD88). Both local and systemic administration of TLR4/Myd88 agonist were equally efficient in synergizing with chemotherapy to reduce tumor growth (FIGS. 47G-H). Inventors anticipate that the systemic application of TLR4 ligand may engage TLR4 on host antigen-presenting cells following the ATP- and purinergic receptor-dependent recruitment and differentiation of inflammatory monocytes Ly6C^(high) cells in the close proximity of dying tumor cells (Ma Y, Immunity In Press). On its own, DEN S could significantly enhance the trafficking of leukocytes (more specifically CD11b⁺ Ly6G⁺ and Ly6C^(high) cells) into tumors, a phenomenon that might result from the mobilization of bone marrow precursors and/or spleen reservoirs. Beyond its nuclear role, HMGB1 also functions as an extracellular cytokine-like molecule during various tumor-relevant pathological processes such as inflammation, cellular differentiation and migration (Muller S et al., EMBO J. 2001; Lotze M T et al., Nat Rev Immunol 2005; Ellerman J E et al., Clin Cancer Res 2007; Dong Xda E et al., J Immunother 2007). Indeed, HMGB1 can favor tumor progression through neoangiogenesis, presumably by attracting proangiogenic macrophages and endothelial cells in tumor beds (Venneri M A et al., Blood 2007), as well as by promoting sprouting of endothelial cells. Hence, HMGB1 is often considered as a protumorigenic factor associated with dismal prognosis (Nest A et al., Cancer Res 2001; Poser I et al., Mol Cell Biol 2003). Accordingly, HMGB1-Receptor for Advanced Glycation Endproducts (RAGE) interactions have been described to stimulate invasion, migration and the growth of implanted gliomas (Yu W et al., J Cell Biol 1997). The replacement of HMGB1 by a synthetic compound capable of triggering TLR4 and the immunogenicity of cell death without favoring angiogenesis or invasion constitutes a challenge. Like most TLR agonists, TLR4 ligands may be considered as double-edged swords, as they bind to dendritic cell TLR4 to activate the immune system but also interact with TLR3 (or RAGE) on tumor cells to favor the manifestation of cell-intrinsic tumorigenic hallmarks and chemoresistance (Conforti R et al., Cancer Res 2010; Oblak A et al., Clin Dev Immunol 2011). In their model system, inventors ruled out the possibility that DEN S would directly act on CT26, MCA205 or EL4 to enhance (or reduce) tumor cell proliferation (not shown). Moreover, a single injection at day 2 post-chemotherapy was sufficient to amplify the immune effects of chemotherapy, bypassing the requirement for a prolonged exposure to TLR4 agonists (FIG. 49). Supplying tumor beds with a TLR4 agonist at the time of late apoptosis or necrosis could gear the phagocytosed antigenic cargo to the appropriate antigen processing compartments, thus ensuring optimal processing and presentation of tumor antigens to T cells (Apetoh L et al.; Nat Med 2007).

Collectively, inventors' data imply that combining anthracyclines or oxaliplatin with DEN S improve the T cell-based immune responses accounting for prolonged anticancer effects. On theoretical grounds, this chemoimmunotherapy should be proposed to patients harbouring HMGB1-deficient tumors but bearing a functional TLR (and hence lacking the loss-of-function allele coding for TLR4 Asp299Gly). This strategy for the stratification of patients could add even more complexity to the current efforts of personalized therapy applied to breast tumors. Whether these approaches aimed at reenforcing immunity will mainly benefit to immune-prone neoplasia (Andre F et al., Clin Cancer Res 2012; Messina J L et al., Sci Rep 2012), or also improve the clinical management of immunosuppressed/immunoedited cancers needs to be determined in forthcoming clinical trials.

Conclusion

Immunogenic cell death (ICD) induced by anticancer chemotherapy is characterized by a series of molecular hallmarks that include the exodus of high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1) from dying cells. HMGB1 is a nuclear non-histone chromatin binding protein, that is secreted at late stages of cellular demise and engages TLR4 on dendritic cells (DC) to accelerate the processing of phagocytic cargo in DC and to facilitate antigen presentation by DC to T cells. Absent HMGB1 expression by dying tumor cells exposed to anthracycline- or oxaliplatine compromises DC-dependent T cell priming by tumor-associated antigens. In this example, inventors demonstrate that transplantable tumours exhibiting weak expression of nuclear HMGB1 respond to chemotherapy much better if the treatment is combined with the local or systemic administration of a chemically defined TLR4 agonist, dendrophilin, but not that of a natural TLR4 agonist, lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The synergistic antitumor effects mediated by the combination of chemotherapy and immunotherapy relied upon the presence of the Myd88 adaptor of TLR4 (but not that of the TRIF adaptor), in line with the specific action of dendrophilin on the Myd88 (rather than TRIF)-mediated signalling pathway. Dendrophilin and anthracyclines synergized to induce intratumoral accumulation of interferon-γ-producing CD4⁺ and CD8⁺ T lymphocytes. Moreover, dendrophilin restore the immunogenicity of dying tumor cells from which HMGB1 had been depleted by RNA interference. These findings underscore the potential clinical utility of combination regimens involving immunogenic chemotherapy and synthetic TLR4 agonists.

Example 12 HMGB1 and LC3-II as Immunogenic Cell Death Biomarkers for the Response to Chemotherapy

Inventors evaluated two immunogenic cell death markers, i.e., HMGB1 and LC3-II, on paraffine-embedded BC specimen in a test (50 early breast Cancer, BC, cases treated with adjuvant anthracyclines that relapse at 3 years paired with 50 cases that were disease-free at 10 years, with an IGR follow up) and a validation cohort on 150 Her2 negative early BC treated with adjuvant anthracyclines at CLCC Dijon.

Patients Characteristics:

Variable N (%) Estrogen receptor Positive   60 (39.5%) Negative   92 (60.5%) HER2 overexpression No 152 (100%) Yes 0 (0%) Axillary lymph node involvement Yes 107 (70%)  No 45 (30%) N stage N0 45 (30%) N1 83 (55%) N2 19 (12%) N3 5 (3%) T stage T1 90 (59%) T2 56 (37%) T3 3 (2%) T4 3 (2%) Grade I/II 81 (53%) III 71 (47%) Relapse 53 (35%) Death 40 (26%)

HMGB1 positivity (“1”) is considered for a given specimen when the staining is predominantly “nuclear” in at least >50% tumor cells. LC3-II positivity (“1”) is considered for a given specimen when the staining is predominantly “cytosolic in puncta” in at least >10% tumor cells. Autophagy related LC3-II positivity has been reported by inventors (Ladoire S et al.; Autophagy 2012).

IHC stainings (left panel: HMGB1 positive, right panel: HMGB1 negative)-FIG. 55:

For IHC: Antibody: HMGB1: rabbit polyclonal, Thermo Scientific Pierce, #PA1-16926, LC3: IgG1 mouse, clone 5F10, nanoTools, #0231-100/LC3-5F10 Cut-off points: HMGB1: nuclear positivity for more than 50% tumor cells is a criteria of positivity, LC3-II: presence of cytosolic puncta in more than 10% tumor cells is a criterium of positivity. Dilution: HMGB1 use at 4 μg/ml LC3 use at 2.5 μg/ml Results:

35% were HMGB1 positive while 29% were LC3-II positive. When combining the two markers, inventors obtained 37.6% early BC that were negative for both markers (0/0), 42.5% that were positive only for one of the two markers (0/1 or 1/0) and 19.9% that were positive for both (1/1). In uni- and multi-variate analysis, each of these two markers were independently associated with disease-free survival, with a lower p value for triple negative BC. When both markers were combined, the 0/0 patients population had a shorter time to relapse compared with the 1/1 patients (see FIG. 58). In addition, those tumors presenting with high levels of nuclear HMGB1 or high expression of LC3-II (>10%) are infiltrated with immune cells (CD8+ T cells but not CD68 macrophages), and this observation is more significant in triple negative breast cancers ((not shown).

Conclusion

At difference with many other cytotoxic chemotherapeutics, anthracyclines stimulate immunogenic cell death that is characterized by a compendium of subtle biochemical changes in the plasma membrane surface and in the microenvironment of dying cancer cells. These changes include the pre-apoptotic exposure of calreticuline on the plasma membrane surface (to facilitate the engulfment of portions of the dying cells by antigen-presenting cells, APC) and the post-apoptotic exodus of high mobility group B1 (HMGB1) from the nucleus (to engage with TLR4 receptors and to stimulate antigen presentation). Moreover, ATP release by autophagy-competent dying tumor cells (positive for LC3-II) is essential for the induction of an anticancer immune response, both by stimulating the recruitment of inflammatory cells into the tumor bed and by ligating P2RX7 receptors on dendritic cells, hence facilitating the activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome and the consequent secretion of IL-1b by APC.

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We claim:
 1. A method of treating a subject having a tumor identified as resistant to a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer, wherein the method comprises: a step of determining the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response, said step comprising verifying the expression by tumor cells of nuclear HMGB1, wherein the absence of nuclear HMGB1 in tumor cells is indicative of the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response and the inability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of a resistance of the subject to the conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer wherein the presence of nuclear HMGB1 in tumor cells is indicative of the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response and the ability of the tumor to induce an anticancer immune response being indicative of the subject's sensitivity to the conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer, and a step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer with a composition comprising, dendrophilin in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin and an anti-CD39 antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin and an anti-CD73 antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin, an anti-CD39 antibody and an anti-CD73 antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin and a composition comprising an anti-CD39 antibody and an anti-CD73 antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin and a composition comprising an anti-CD39 antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of treating a subject identified as resistant to said conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer comprises the administration of a composition comprising dendrophilin and a composition comprising an anti-CD73 antibody antibody in combination with a conventional immunogenic treatment of cancer selected from an anthracyclin, a platin, a taxane, a cyclophosphamide and an antimotic agent; and radiotherapy to said subject. 